Montevideo toma agua más salada ante la sequía y falta de reservas en embalses

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:42:51 GMT

Montevideo toma agua más salada ante la sequía y falta de reservas en embalses (CNN Español) –– Pese a estar ubicado sobre una de las mayores reservas de agua dulce del mundo, Uruguay sufre desde hace un par de semanas problemas desabastecimiento de agua potable en su capital.El agua sigue fluyendo por las cañerías, pero desde hace varios días su sabor es más salado por el exceso de sodio, lo cual generó quejas de los usuarios y preocupaciones de salud entre los médicos.¿A qué se debe este cambio? A que, ante el déficit hídrico y la escasez de agua dulce en el río Santa Lucía y en sus embalses por la sequía que sufre el país, la empresa estatal Obras Sanitarias del Estado (OSE) decidió empezar a partir del 26 de abril a realizar una mezcla diferente del agua disponible. Eso supone tomar una parte del agua de una fuente más cercana al río de la Plata, el estuario que recibe aguas oceánicas saladas.“Decidimos en el día de hoy empezar a mezclar en forma diferente (…) El agua ‘aguas abajo’ puede tener mayor salinidad, pero nos vemos obligados a que por lo menos la...

China reports its exports grew in April by 8.5% compared with a year earlier

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:42:51 GMT

China reports its exports grew in April by 8.5% compared with a year earlier BEIJING (AP) — China reports its exports grew in April by 8.5% compared with a year earlier.Source

Wiemer, Adames homer as Brewers win 9-3 to cool off Dodgers

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:42:51 GMT

Wiemer, Adames homer as Brewers win 9-3 to cool off Dodgers MILWAUKEE (AP) — Joey Wiemer has made more of an impact with his glove than with his bat thus far in his rookie season.But the Milwaukee Brewers outfielder showed Monday night just how much potential he has to produce at the plate.Wiemer and Willy Adames hit three-run homers to back Freddy Peralta’s strong pitching and the Brewers defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 9-3.Wiemer rebounded from a tough road trip by going 2 of 3 with a career-high four RBIs.“When I get my feet under me, I’ll get going,” Wiemer said. “It’s a hard game and it humbles you quick.”The Brewers have won their last two games after losing six straight. Milwaukee ended its longest skid of the young season Sunday with a 7-3 victory at San Francisco.Chris Taylor hit a two-run homer in the ninth for the Dodgers, who lost for just the second time in 10 games.Wiemer has played great defense and made a seamless transition when a shoulder injury to fellow rookie Garrett Mitchell caused him to shift his primary position fro...

Colorado passes property tax bill

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:42:51 GMT

Colorado passes property tax bill DENVER (KDVR) — The 2023 legislative session is officially wrapping up and with it comes the passage of several bills, including a potential fix to high property tax bills. Republicans walked out of the House in the session's final hours, upset with the Democrats’ bill on property taxes.House Minority Leader Mike Lynch, R-Wellington, issued a statement in response."For 120 days, our minority caucus came to the House Chamber with the intention of collaborating despite not having a seat at the table and being told to wait outside while real decisions were being made inside. Invoking rarely — if ever — used rules doesn’t just silence us, it takes away the opportunity for the people we represent to hear what we have to say.By walking out in protest, we sent a message to the Majority, who are mostly Metro area Democrats, that our state includes much more than the concrete and steel parts of Colorado. Our voices - that fill the Front Range and the Western Slope — deserve to have...

One-on-one with Gannon Stauch's mother, Landon Bullard

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:42:51 GMT

One-on-one with Gannon Stauch's mother, Landon Bullard EL PASO COUNTY, Colo. (KDVR) — Three years after an 11-year-old Colorado boy’s murder, a jury found his stepmother, Letecia Stauch, guilty on all counts.A judge sentenced her to life without parole. FOX31 sat down one on one with Gannon Stauch's biological mother, Landon Bullard, just hours after the verdict.Bullard invited FOX31 into her El Paso County home. After three years, five long weeks of testimony and an agonizing weekend of waiting for this verdict, Monday was unlike any feeling she said she's ever been through.Bullard recalled some of the most difficult parts of the trial, including at one point when Letecia Stauch "imitates his last breath. That really got to me. I think that was a huge jab and it just shows you how evil a person can be," Bullard said."She is the definition of coward and evil in my eyes," Bullard said.Watch parts of the interview in the video player above.Read FOX31’s coverage of the trial:‘She was killing the demons in her life’: Sanity the focus in St...

Reform or die? If the US gets its way, the WTO might do both

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:42:51 GMT

Reform or die? If the US gets its way, the WTO might do both GENEVA — The United States put the World Trade Organization into intensive care by single-handedly killing off its highest court four years ago — in so doing endangering the global rules-based trading system.Now Washington is — ever so quietly — floating the idea of a new-look appeals process that could help get the WTO off life support. And that is leading some trade diplomats in Geneva to question whether the patient would survive the operation that Joe Biden’s administration has in mind.“It’s reform or die,” one senior Geneva trade diplomat told POLITICO, setting out the scale of the task before the WTO and its director-general, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala.“[Major powers] are contesting the norms, they are pushing the rules. And if we don’t accommodate and adjust and find a way to keep the big players in the system, then … we do fade into irrelevance,” they added.The creation of the WTO in 1995 represented the high-water mark of globalization and the liberal world order follo...

An 8-run 6th inning dooms the Chicago White Sox in a 12-5 loss to the Kansas City Royals

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:42:51 GMT

An 8-run 6th inning dooms the Chicago White Sox in a 12-5 loss to the Kansas City Royals Dylan Cease believed he had a better feel for getting pitches in the strike zone Monday than he had in recent starts.“In that terms it was better,” the Chicago White Sox starter said, “but obviously the results were still not good.”The right-hander allowed a season-high seven earned runs as the Kansas City Royals throttled the Sox 12-5 in front of 9,814 at Kauffman Stadium.“This was a tough one,” Sox manager Pedro Grifol said. “We accomplished some things that we wanted to get accomplished, which was to get ahead in the count. Our (goal of) two out of three (strikes to a batter) was really high.“But when we got them on two strikes, we just couldn’t put them away. I think they got about seven hits with two strikes — three extra-base hits, including a homer and a couple doubles. That was the game right there.”One day after a blowout win against the Cincinnati Reds, the Sox suffered a blowout loss.In both cases, one big ...

Franks: We failed to learn 2008 banking crisis

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:42:51 GMT

Franks: We failed to learn 2008 banking crisis How can billions of dollars be lost, and nobody can figure out who got the money or where it all went.In the last banking crisis in 2008 – which led to a crippling recession in America and around the world – a deep-dive investigation revealed that bankers knew exactly what they were doing when they made residential real estate red hot.They issued subprime loans to those with poor credit histories; held and sold artificially overvalued properties that went underwater – thanks to appraisers; and packaged bad or toxic loans which were doomed non-performing loans to unassuming investors and banks worldwide. As a result, the whole banking sector was a giant balloon just waiting for a pin to come along.So, why were hundreds of bankers not arrested during a banking crisis that led to our Great Recession from late 2007 to 2009? Apparently, the banks were deemed too big to fail and the bankers were too clever to get caught.When we do not show respect for the law, society crumbles. That is ex...

Robert Rodriguez brings indie flair to ‘Hypnotic’ sci-fi thriller

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:42:51 GMT

Robert Rodriguez brings indie flair to ‘Hypnotic’ sci-fi thriller With Friday’s sci-fi thriller “Hypnotic,” Robert Rodriguez closes a circle with a scenario he created over 20 years ago.Set in Austin, Rodriguez’s hometown and central beehive where he films, edits and produces his movies, “Hypnotic” stars Ben Affleck as Danny Rourke, an Austin police detective haunted but never ever giving up the search for his missing three-year-old daughter.When Rourke busts an elaborate and bizarre bank robbery in progress he discovers Hypnotics — powerful hypnotists trained by a secretive government agency known as the Division that controls people’s minds.“I’ve always loved the story. It came to me very fast,” Rodriguez, 54, said this week in a phone interview.  “I wanted to do something like my favorite Hitchcock thrillers. But I kept getting on other projects and before you know it, like 15 years have gone by before I brought it back up.“What’s nice about a story if it hooks you like that and you keep going back to it, you know itR...

Editorial: Biden holds airlines accountable, but not himself

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:42:51 GMT

Editorial: Biden holds airlines accountable, but not himself The Biden Administration and its Congressional allies are all for holding businesses accountable for harm inflicted on consumers – even if that harm is simply making a profit. But who is holding government responsible for its actions?Airlines are in the crosshairs as widespread flight delays and cancellations roiled the holidays last year. They’ve earned the ire of passengers and lawmakers.As reported, the White House said Monday it’s preparing new rules aimed at requiring airlines to compensate passengers for significant flight delays or cancellations when the carriers are responsible.“When an airline causes a flight cancellation or delay, passengers should not foot the bill,” U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a statement.Well done. But when the president and lawmakers cause fiscal harm to Americans through actions which spur inflation and subsequent interest rate increases, why should we foot the bill?The Biden Administration’s tril...