Colorado’s top election official wants to limit who can get a recount. A top Democrat thinks it’ll backfire.

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 08:16:38 GMT

Colorado’s top election official wants to limit who can get a recount. A top Democrat thinks it’ll backfire. Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold has called on lawmakers to limit the use of discretionary recounts in state elections to only close races, arguing that the current system allows for “bad actors” to inject doubts into often settled races.“It’s an important check on democracy that candidates in close races can have that recount,” Griswold, a Democrat in her second term, said in an interview Monday. The recount provision would be part of a broader bill she’s working on with Senate Democrats to tweak the state’s elections laws. “But when you have double-digit margins, it’s implausible — so unlikely — that a recount will actually lead to a change in the actual results.”But the president of the Senate — the man who’s drafting the bill Griswold is pitching — isn’t sold on the recount adjustment. In fact, he told reporters last week, he thinks it would do the very thing Griswold says it would help ...

For risking his life for Lebanon, Omar Harfouch won the Olive Tree Peace Prize in France.

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 08:16:38 GMT

For risking his life for Lebanon, Omar Harfouch won the Olive Tree Peace Prize in France. During the annual French Iftar event attended by top-level political figures, the "Olive Tree of Peace" award was won this year by Omar Harfouch and the editor-in-chief of Charlie Hebdo."The olive tree of peace" was presented to Omar Harfouch by French MP Caroline Yadan, close to French President Emmanuel Macron, who praised him for his courage in the fight against corruption and for peace in Lebanon. For his part, Harfouch confirmed to the public and to political and spiritual personalities that he had sworn to carry out his project. Harfouch's name for the award was suggested by Jean-Christophe Lagarde, leader of the French centre party UDI, who visited Lebanon a few weeks ago and met with all the political leaders. As for the second prize, it went to the editor-in-chief of the French newspaper Charlie Hebdo, Gérard Pierre. The ceremony took place in the presence of high French personalities.

1 dead, 8 injured after police chase ends in a crash in Long Beach

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 08:16:38 GMT

1 dead, 8 injured after police chase ends in a crash in Long Beach A woman is dead and eight other people were hospitalized in a nine-vehicle crash following a pursuit in Long Beach on Tuesday night.The incident began after an officer tried pulling over a suspect driver in Seal Beach near 5th and Marina, according to Seal Beach police. The suspect did not yield and sped away on Pacific Coast Highway, leading officers on a pursuit.The suspect later crashed near the intersection of East Pacific Coast Highway and 2nd Street around 8:15 p.m., officials said.The collision involved eight other vehicles, leaving one person, a woman in her 60s, dead and eight others injured, authorities confirm.One person is dead and at least eight others were hospitalized after a multi-vehicle crash in Long Beach on Tuesday night. (KTLA)One person is dead and at least eight others were hospitalized after a multi-vehicle crash in Long Beach on Tuesday night. (KTLA)One person is dead and at least eight others were hospitalized after a multi-vehicle crash in Long Beach on Tu...

Kamala Harris faces painful Black history in emotional slave outpost visit

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 08:16:38 GMT

Kamala Harris faces painful Black history in emotional slave outpost visit By Jasmine Wright | CNNVice President Kamala Harris emerged from the female slave dungeon at Cape Coast Castle visibly shaken. Inside the famous slave trading outpost’s dungeon, Harris set a bouquet of flowers down and placed her hand on the centuries-old wall, connecting herself physically to the sorrow of the Africans it once imprisoned.It was a rare show of emotion for the typically stoic barrier-breaking leader, often reticent to talk about her own plight as a Black woman in America. But at a makeshift podium in front of the cannons that stretch along the ocean, Harris’ voice broke as she talked, delivering at times off-the-cuff remarks to describe what she saw.“Being here was immensely powerful,” Harris said at the castle, a relic of transatlantic cruelty. “The crimes that were done here. The blood that was shed here.”“The horror of what happened here must always be remembered. It cannot be denied. It must be taught; history must be lea...

Sharks’ Reimer makes incredible save, hears cheers in San Jose, but faces uncertain future

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 08:16:38 GMT

Sharks’ Reimer makes incredible save, hears cheers in San Jose, but faces uncertain future SAN JOSE – San Jose Sharks goalie James Reimer saw the puck slide over to Mason Appleton, who had most of the yawning 4’ x 6’ net to shoot at from his position a few feet away from the crease.The only thing Reimer could do, as his body was pointed in another direction, was to extend his goalie stick back to try and cover some small portion of the net.“I just heard the Homer (Simpson) scream in my head,” Reimer said. “That was pretty much all that was going on.”Somehow, Reimer stopped the shot, keeping the Winnipeg Jets from tying the game, and providing the Sharks with a rare highlight in what’s been an all-too-dreary season on home ice.“Unbelievable. I stood up right away,” said Sharks winger Noah Gregor, who had a goal and an assist against the Jets. “Crazy save. I thought it was a for sure a goal for (Appleton). (Reimer) made a bunch of great saves tonight. That one’s going to stick out.”REIM TIME. #SJSharks pic.twitter.com/uw8I9F5mFs— TEAL TOWN USA – A San Jose...

SF Giants’ Conforto eager start season in New York. Here’s why Kapler feels he’s in for a big year

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 08:16:38 GMT

SF Giants’ Conforto eager start season in New York. Here’s why Kapler feels he’s in for a big year SAN FRANCISCO — Giants outfielder Michael Conforto was always going to be a little bit nervous going into Opening Day, considering what he’s been through.That Conforto’s first Major League Baseball game in over 18 months will be on the biggest stage in baseball – Yankee Stadium – only heightens his anticipation.“I’m sure I’ll have a lot of a lot of jitters, some nerves being back for a real Major League game,” Conforto said Monday at Oracle Park. “The atmosphere is going to be crazy in New York. I’m excited to just get out there and get the season started.”The Giants open the 2023 season on Thursday against Aaron Judge and the New York Yankees and Conforto, who missed the entire 2022 season with a shoulder injury, might be the most eager player of all.Conforto’s last regular season game in a big-league stadium was Oct. 3, 2021, at Truist Park in Atlanta, as he and New York Mets wrapped up a disappointing 77-85 year. His .729 OPS and 14 homers in 125 games tha...

Editorial: CalFresh recipients, Bay Area food banks need support

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 08:16:38 GMT

Editorial: CalFresh recipients, Bay Area food banks need support The timing couldn’t be worse for CalFresh recipients and Bay Area food banks that strive to feed the needy.The federal pandemic-era monthly allotments that began in 2020 to boost food payments to low-income individuals and families are due to expire after Friday. The additional money, roughly $150 a month, provided more funds for an estimated 600,000 Bay Area residents covered by the federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, known in California as CalFresh.  The California Legislature should step in to help make up some of the shortfall by increasing state funding for those in need. And private donors should redouble their efforts to help the Bay Area’s food banks, which will be experiencing even greater demand as the federal supplements expire.The pandemic may be over, but food insecurity across the Bay Area continues to grow at an alarming rate.Food banks in Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara and Solano counties are reporting t...

Opinion: Why should San Mateo Count jail ban handwritten letters from loved ones?

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 08:16:38 GMT

Opinion: Why should San Mateo Count jail ban handwritten letters from loved ones? Is it too much to ask to be able to send a letter to my son in jail and know he’ll hold it in his hands? To know he can read it in his cell and then unfold and read it again and again whenever? To know he can keep it the way I keep his letters to me?For the first three years that my son Kevin was incarcerated in San Mateo County, this was not too much to ask. The jail staff used to open my letters, check them for illicit messages and contraband and then deliver them to my son. I wrote my letters knowing they’d be inspected but also knowing that they’d be delivered. In his hands, my letters went back to being something between us, something of me that he could have and could keep.I shared personal and family news, and I talked about how it felt to live these things without him instead of experiencing them together. I sent letters sharing and supporting our Hindu faith, copying out prayers and chants in Fiji Hindi. I sent other letters specifically to help him learn our beautiful ance...

Opinion: Marcus Foster’s legacy continues shaping Oakland schools

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 08:16:38 GMT

Opinion: Marcus Foster’s legacy continues shaping Oakland schools Friday will mark the 100th birthday of the late Marcus Foster, Oakland’s superintendent of schools from 1970-73. Few residents today have heard of him unless they have read about his senseless assassination by members of the radical Symbionese Liberation Army after a board meeting in 1973. I never met him, but I still feel his impact on me as an educator, parent and student.The late 1960s and early 1970s were a pivotal time in the nation’s history. There was the Vietnam conflict, multiple political assassinations and widespread civil unrest. In Oakland, there were significant questions about the city’s cultural identity and the future direction of its schools.In this challenging time, Foster, the district’s first Black superintendent, stepped forward, boldly proclaiming that “Oakland’s time is now … to write a new chapter in the history of American education.”  With his team, he began to write that chapter. What did it include?First, while much of public education had focused ...

Sale closed in Milpitas: $1.8 million for a four-bedroom home

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 08:16:38 GMT

Sale closed in Milpitas: $1.8 million for a four-bedroom home 113 Sudbury Court – Google Street ViewThe spacious property located in the 100 block of Sudbury Court in Milpitas was sold on March 16, 2023 for $1,830,500, or $875 per square foot. The house, built in 1978, has an interior space of 2,092 square feet. The property features four bedrooms, three bathrooms, a garage, and two parking spaces. There’s also a pool in the backyard. The unit sits on a 5,600-square-foot lot.These nearby houses have also recently been purchased:On Oregon Way, Milpitas, in November 2022, a 2,496-square-foot home was sold for $1,500,000, a price per square foot of $601. The home has 4 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms.A 1,637-square-foot home on the first block of Jacklin Place in Milpitas sold in October 2022, for $1,240,000, a price per square foot of $757. The home has 3 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms.In October 2022, a 1,676-square-foot home on Coventry Circle in Milpitas sold for $1,510,000, a price per square foot of $901. The home has 4 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms.