Saugus Police investigating violent altercation at Kowloon Wednesday night
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:07:02 GMT
Authorities responded to a fight involving multiple parties at the Kowloon Restaurant on Route 1 in Saugus Wednesday night at around 10:30 p.m.Six officers already on the scene working as part of a detail were quickly alerted and worked to deescalate the situation.Several individuals involved in the dispute were detained for questioning and to receive necessary medical treatment. Videos of the fight posted to social media show a chaotic scene and at least one individual with a bloody face.No arrests were made, but Saugus Police said the investigation is ongoing and that charges may be forthcoming, particularly for one individual who was seen using a glass bottle in the fight, a felony offense.“The Kowloon is a family friendly restaurant, unfortunately a few unruly patrons ruined a nice evening for many others,” Saugus Police Chief Michael Ricciardelli said in a statement. “A disturbance such as this on Thanksgiving Eve is unacceptable and disgusting.”The restaurant and b...Biden administration’s limit on drug industry middlemen backfires, pharmacists say
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:07:02 GMT
Arthur Allen | (TNS) KFF Health NewsThe Biden administration’s first major step toward imposing limits on the pharmacy benefit managers who act as the drug industry’s price negotiators is backfiring, pharmacists say. Instead, it’s adding to the woes of the independent drugstores it was partly designed to help.The so-called PBMs have long clawed back a fee from pharmacies weeks or months after they dispense a drug. A new rule, which governs Medicare’s drug program, is set to take effect Jan. 1 and requires PBMs to take most of their “performance fees” at the time prescriptions are filled.The clawbacks have ballooned from about $9 million in 2010 to $12.6 billion in 2021, according to the Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, an agency created to advise Congress on the program for people who are 65 and older or have disabilities.Performance fees have also boosted Medicare patients’ prescription costs at the pharmacy counter by hundreds of millions of dollars, although insurers assert ...The unusual way a Catholic health system is wielding an abortion protest law
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:07:02 GMT
Judy Lin | KFF Health News (TNS)A Catholic hospital system is suing several California patients and their advocates because the patients allegedly refused to be discharged. The suits invoke a novel legal approach: accusing them of trespassing under a California law intended to stop anti-abortion protesters from blocking access to health facilities.Dignity Health has filed three lawsuits in Sacramento County accusing patients of “commercial blockade” for refusing to vacate hospital beds even though the health care provider had deemed them medically and legally eligible to either go home or go to another facility. Dignity alleges the patients “unreasonably and unlawfully” refused discharge, disrupting its ability to serve others at a time when health facilities were overwhelmed by COVID-19.Relatives and advocates say the patients were exercising their right to be discharged to a facility that offered appropriate care and that they could afford, not simply sent home without the ability...How to give wisely and not get suckered this holiday season
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:07:02 GMT
Giving Tuesday is nearly upon us! Plaintive pitches and open palms abound. Do good! Spread cheer! But please, proceed with caution.This is make-or-break season for charities. Nonprofits in America get the majority of their donations between October and December. Giving Tuesday — the one right after Thanksgiving, when heart and brain are still soft from all that turkey and pie — began more than a decade ago, in response to the (grotesque) consumerism of Black Friday and Cyber Monday. A Chicago theater company urged shoppers to consider donating instead of/in addition to buying stuff. “Giving Tuesday” was coined by the 92nd Street Y in partnership with the United Nations Foundation in 2012. And, well, here we are.They’ll hit you up by phone, by mail, by email, and in the flesh, at malls and outside grocery stores. Greet each entreaty with “How much of my donation goes to programs?” and you’re well on your way to making sure your dollars go where you intend them to go. Here’s how not t...Do I have to renew my passport by mail?
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:07:02 GMT
By Sally French | NerdWalletWhen it’s time to renew your U.S. passport, you’ll probably have to do so by mail. That means sending away your current passport and hoping that not only will you receive a fresh, renewed passport — but also that you’ll get your original passport back.Some people may prefer renewal by mail; there’s no need to go to a government office and no need to stand in line. But for others, the idea of sending one of their most important documents through the mail — at the risk of losing it — is hardly preferable at all.Although there are circumstances in which in-person renewal is required, it’s not an option in most situations. Mailing your passport to the National Passport Processing Center is usually the only way to renew it.With that in mind, here’s what you need to know about renewing a passport, and how to reduce the risk of it getting lost in the mail.When you have to renew your passport by mailThere was a time when you could renew yo...Cyberattack to keep some Toronto library systems offline into 2024
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:07:02 GMT
TORONTO — An October cyberattack on Canada’s largest public library system that brought down its website and likely exposed sensitive employee information will keep some services offline into 2024. The Toronto Public Library says service will start to be restored gradually starting in January, calling it an “aggressive timeframe.” It says priority will be given to the library’s website and network of public computers across its 100 branches. The library has previously said the Oct. 28 cyberattack likely exposed the names, social insurance numbers, government identification and addresses of employees dating back to 1998. The library says it did not pay a ransom to the hackers and the stolen data could end up on the dark web. It says staff and third-party experts have been working “around the clock” to restore systems and boost its network security.“We recognize that this is a long period of time without full library services, but this is cons...B.C. sex offender Randall Hopley stays in custody after skipping court date
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:07:02 GMT
VANCOUVER — A high-risk sex offender arrested by Vancouver police after a 10-day manhunt earlier this month remains in custody awaiting his next court date. Randall Hopley was to appear in court on Friday, but his case was put off until Dec. 8 in British Columbia provincial court. Police say Hopley cut off his electronic monitoring device after he walked away from a halfway house in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside on Nov. 4. Hopley had been on a 10-year supervision order after serving a six-year prison term for abducting a three-year-old boy in southeastern B.C., but he was charged last January for allegedly violating those conditions and was to appear in court Nov. 6. Police say they arrested the 58-year-old man the following week when he showed up outside a police station to turn himself in because he was feeling cold.Vancouver Sgt. Steve Addison told media after his arrest that police would recommend to Crown counsel that he be denied bail and remain in custody.Police donR...Twenty-two per cent of construction cones in downtown Montreal are ‘useless’: report
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:07:02 GMT
MONTREAL — A new report by Montreal’s chamber of commerce says about one in five of the ubiquitous orange construction cones in the city’s downtown appears to serve no purpose.The Chamber of Commerce of Metropolitan Montreal found that 22 per cent of downtown cones have been abandoned or are “useless” — down from 27 per cent in fall 2022.Montreal’s seemingly endless lines of traffic cones have long been a running joke, to the point where miniature versions are sold in souvenir shops as an emblem of the city.The administration and the province have committed to making the cones less visible downtown, including reducing their size and forcing companies to remove them more quickly after work concludes. And while there are slightly fewer cones, the chamber of commerce says there’s been little success in reducing the number of construction sites blocking access to downtown.The report says that 93 per cent of downtown streets were fully or partly blocke...Cleanup, air monitoring underway at Kentucky train derailment site
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:07:02 GMT
LIVINGSTON, Ky. (AP) — Kentucky officials and crews with rail operator CSX were working Friday to remove train cars and spilled material at the site of a derailment that sparked a chemical fire earlier in the week and prompted home evacuations in a nearby small town.State officials said Friday they were monitoring the air for traces of hydrogen sulfide and sulfur dioxide, but there had been no detection of those substances at the derailment site or the nearby town of Livingston since Thursday morning. The fire was extinguished at the site Thursday morning.“We’re now able to get in and begin safely removing cars,” Joe McCann, director of emergency management and hazardous materials for CSX, said at a briefing Friday. McCann said an access road has been built to reach the derailment area and a handful of crashed train cars have been removed.The CSX train derailed around 2:30 p.m. Wednesday near Livingston, a remote town with about 200 people in Rockcastle County. Residents were ...Some Home Decorators Collection artificial Christmas trees recalled over fire risk
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 08:07:02 GMT
Home Depot is recalling some of its pre-lit artificial Christmas trees because they could pose a fire hazard.Health Canada says consumers should stop using the Home Decorators Collection 7.5 foot Grand Duchess Balsam Fir tree with 5000 Colour Changing Lights.It says the tree’s control panel or electrical cord plug may overheat.Home Depot says 883 of the trees have been sold in Canada, but no incidents or injuries had been reported as of Tuesday.The affected trees were sold in October and November of this year.Consumers should return them to a local Home Depot store for a full refund.The model number for the affected trees is 23LE61001 and the article number is 1001803629.This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 24, 2023.Canadian Press health coverage receives support through a partnership with the Canadian Medical Association. CP is solely responsible for this content.The Canadian PressLatest news
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