By DAVE GRAM, Associated Press MONTPELIER, Vt. — The storm that had been Hurricane Irene crossed into Canada overnight but wasn’t yet through with the U.S., where flood waters threatened Vermont towns and big city commuters had to make do with slowly reawakening transit systems. The storm left millions without power across much of the Eastern Seaboard, killed at least two dozen and forced airlines to cancel about 9,000 flights. It never became the big-city nightmare forecasters and public officials had warned about, but it caused the worst flooding in a century in Vermont. (SCROLL DOWN FOR LIVE UPDATES) Many of the worst effects arose from rains that fell inland, not the highly anticipated storm surge along the coasts. Residents of Pennsylvania and New Jersey nervously watched waters rise as hours’ worth of rain funneled into rivers and creeks. Normally narrow ribbons of water turned into raging torrents in Vermont and upstate New York late Sunday, tumbling with tree limbs, cars and parts of bridges. “This is not over,” President Barack Obama said from the Rose Garden. Hundreds of Vermonters were told to leave their homes after Irene dumped several inches of rain on the landlocked state. Gov. Peter Shumlin called it the worst flooding in a century, and the state was declared a federal disaster area. “We prepared for the worst and we got the worst in central and southern Vermont,” Shumlin said Monday. “We have extraordinary infrastructure damage,” including communities that were cut off, hundreds of roads closures and the loss of at least three historic covered bridges. Video posted on Facebook showed a 141-year-old covered bridge in Rockingham, Vt., swept away by the roiling, muddy Williams River. In another video, an empty car somersaulted down a river in Bennington. “It’s pretty fierce. I’ve never seen anything like it,” said Michelle Guevin, who spoke from a Brattleboro restaurant after leaving her home in nearby Newfane. She said the fast-moving Rock River was washing out the road to her house. Officials at one point thought they might have to flood the state capital, Montpelier, to relieve pressure on a dam. But by Monday morning that threat had abated. Nearly 5 million homes and businesses lost power at some point during the storm. Lights started to come back on for many on Sunday, though it was expected to take days for electricity to be fully restored. Only about 50,000 power customers in New York City went dark, but people there had something else to worry about: getting to work Monday. The metropolitan area’s transit system, shut down because of weather for the first time in its history, was taking many hours to get back on line. Limited bus service began Sunday and New York subway service was partially restored at 6 a.m. Monday. Commuter rail service to Long Island and New Jersey was being partially restored, but the Metro-North Railroad to Westchester County and Connecticut was suspended because of flooding and mudslides. Riders were warned to expect long lines and long waits, but early commuters reported empty subways and smooth rides. Mentor Vargas, 54, said he made his 40-minute trip on the J train without incident. “It seems people aren’t going to work today,” he said on his way to work at a repair company in Queens. Likewise, Philadelphia’s transit system was mostly restarted Monday, though some train lines weren’t running because of downed trees and wire damage. Airports in New York and around the Northeast reopened to a backlog of hundreds of thousands of passengers whose flights were canceled over the weekend. Some of New York’s yellow cabs were up to their wheel wells in water, and water rushed over a marina near the New York Mercantile Exchange, where gold and oil are traded. But the New York flooding was not extensive from Irene, whose eye passed over Coney Island and Central Park. The New York Stock Exchange was opening for business on Monday, and the Sept. 11 memorial at the World Trade Center site didn’t lose a single tree. Mayor Michael Bloomberg defended his decision to order 370,000 residents to evacuate their homes in low-lying areas, saying it was impossible to know just how powerful the storm would be. “We were just unwilling to risk the life of a single New Yorker,” he said. Irene had at one time been a major hurricane, with winds higher than 110 mph as it headed toward the U.S. It was a tropical storm with 65 mph winds by the time it hit New York. It lost the characteristics of a tropical storm and had slowed to 50 mph by the time it reached Canada. Chris Fogarty, director of the Canadian Hurricane Centre, warned of flooding and wind damage in eastern Canada and said the heaviest rainfall was expected in Quebec, where about 250,000 homes were without power. At least 25 people died in the U.S., most of them when trees crashed through roofs or onto cars. One Vermont woman was swept away and feared drowned in the Deerfield River. Officials worked to repair hundreds of damaged roads, and power companies picked through uprooted trees and reconnected lines. One private estimate put damage along the coast at $7 billion, far from any record for a natural disaster. Twenty homes on Long Island Sound in Connecticut were destroyed by churning surf. The torrential rain chased hundreds of people in upstate New York from their homes and closed 137 miles of the state’s main highway. Authorities in and around Easton, Pa., kept a close eye on the rising Delaware River. The National Weather Service forecast the river to crest there at more than 27 feet, about 5 feet above flood stage. In the South, authorities still were not sure how much damage had been done but expressed relief that it wasn’t worse. “Thank God it weakened a little bit,” said Virginia Gov. Bob McDonnell, who toured a hard-hit Richmond neighborhood where large, old-growth trees uprooted and crushed houses and automobiles. In Norfolk, Va., where storm surges got within inches of breaking a record, most of the water had receded by Sunday. There was isolated flooding and downed trees, but nowhere near the damage officials predicted. “We can’t believe a hurricane came through here,” city spokeswoman Lori Crouch said. In North Carolina, where six people were killed, the infrastructure losses included the only road to the seven villages on Hatteras Island. “Overall, the destruction is not as severe as I was worried it might be, but there is still lots and lots of destruction and people’s lives are turned upside down,” Gov. Beverly Perdue said in Kill Devil Hills. In an early estimate, consulting firm Kinetic Analysis Corp. figured total losses from the storm at $7 billion, with insured losses of $2 billion to $3 billion. The storm will take a bite out of Labor Day tourist business from the Outer Banks to the Jersey Shore to Cape Cod. Irene was the first hurricane to make landfall in the continental United States since 2008, and came almost six years to the day after Katrina ravaged New Orleans on Aug. 29, 2005. ___ Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Samantha Gross, Beth Fouhy, Samantha Bomkamp, Verena Dobnik, Jonathan Fahey, Tom Hays, Colleen Long and Larry Neumeister in New York; Brock Vergakis in Virginia Beach, Va.; Marc Levy in Chester, Pa. and Jeff McMillan in Philadelphia; and Seth Borenstein and Christopher S. Rugaber in Washington.
Continue reading …Calls for Abdelbaset al-Megrahi to face extradition appear redundant after footage emerges showing him close to death The campaign for the extradition of Abdelbaset al-Megrahi, the man convicted of the Lockerbie bombing, has in effect ended after footage emerged showing him apparently close to death. Calls for his rearrest from US senators, lawyers and relatives of Lockerbie bombing victims appeared redundant given Megrahi’s abject condition in images recorded at his mother’s house in Tripoli. The Scottish first minister, Alex Salmond, said the Scottish government “never had any intention” of asking for Megrahi to be returned to jail. Andrew Mitchell, the UK government foreign minister, said the question was now “academic” after CNN broadcast footage showing Megrahi lying in bed unconscious and apparently “at death’s door”. Mitchell said the Tories had opposed Megrahi’s original release on compassionate grounds in 2009, but that the question of whether to extradite him was a matter for the Scottish government. He added: “It’s clear that many of these matters are now academic as his life is drawing to a close … it’s clear from reports today that he has not got much longer to live.” Megrahi’s son Khaled and brother Abdul Nasser al-Megrahi told reporters at the family home that Megrahi was now comatose and close to death. They said he had been without proper medical attention for several days, claiming his medication had been looted from pharmacists during the rebel advance into Tripoli. “There is no doctor. There is nobody to ask. We don’t have any phone line to call anybody,” Khaled al-Megrahi said. Speaking on Sky News, Salmond said recent speculation about Megrahi’s disappearance had been “completely inaccurate”. He said: “The only people who have any authority in this matter are the Scottish government, who have jurisdiction in this matter … and the new Libyan transitional council, who are the new duly constituted legal authority in Libya. “We have never had and don’t have any intention of asking for the extradition of Mr Megrahi. It’s quite clear from the Libyan transitional council that following their own laws they had never any intention of agreeing to such extradition.” On Monday the Libyan rebels’ National Transitional Council said the Megrahi case was not a priority. The justice minister, Mohammed al-Alagi, said: “We have very many important issues now. We realise this [the Megrahi case] is very important to some of our western allies. But the most crucial thing now is to secure our country. The second thing is to stabilise Libya so that it can function. After that we can look at related issues between us and other governments.” Calls for Megrahi to be either taken back into Scottish custody or extradited to the US for a fresh trial intensified last week, led by the US Republican Mitt Romney, after it emerged that Scottish officials charged with monitoring him in Libya after his early release from jail had been unable to make contact. That raised substantial questions about whether Megrahi had breached the terms of his release on licence in August 2009. On Sunday night, East Renfrewshire council and the Scottish government issued a joint statement saying they had finally made contact with Megrahi’s family over the weekend. However, East Renfrewshire officials have admitted to the Guardian that they have not yet spoken to Megrahi in person. Their last contact directly with him was on 8 August. They said they were still trying to talk to him, but confirmed that his dramatically worsening health was making that task far more difficult. “We are still in the process of re-establishing contact,” a council spokesman said on Monday morning. “We have had some contact with the family and we will continue with that.” Direct contact is “part of the licence and that is what we are aiming for, if we can do that”, he said. Romney and US relatives claim Megrahi was not properly punished for his alleged role in the Lockerbie atrocity, in which 270 crew, passengers and people on the ground were killed when Pan Am Flight 103 was blown up over the small Scottish town in December 1988. Despite his repeated claims of innocence, they also believe he could offer new evidence about Libya’s role in the bombing. John Bolton, the former US ambassador to the United Nations, said Megrahi should have received the death penalty for Lockerbie. “To me it will be a signal of how serious the rebel government is for good relations with the United States and the west if they hand over Megrahi for trial,” he said. “He killed 270 people. He served roughly 10 years in jail before he was released by British authorities. Do the math – that means he served roughly two weeks in prison for every person he killed. Two weeks per murder. That is not nearly enough.” In a statement posted on a “justice for Megrahi” page on Facebook on Saturday night, Khaled al-Megrahi said: “My father’s general health is very bad. Sometimes he is in a coma. The family is trying to help him to eat at least a little food. We move him to hospital and his parent’s house. He is still confined to his bed, and my mother and his sister are helping him. “All our house telephones are out of order. I personally tried to get in touch with the drug store to get his regular daily use of medicine. Thieves have stolen most of his medicine.” Dr Jim Swire, the Lockerbie campaigner whose daughter Flora died in the attack, said Megrahi ought to be allowed to die with dignity. “I feel in view of all he has been through that he should have been accorded a peaceful end in Tripoli with his family. The idea of extraditing him is a monstrous one,” he said. “This is a man who withdrew his appeal so that he could be allowed to die close to his family and he deserves to be left in peace for his last days.” Abdelbaset al-Megrahi Libya Lockerbie plane bombing Arab and Middle East unrest Scotland Middle East Africa Global terrorism UK security and terrorism Air transport Severin Carrell Luke Harding guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …After sleeping through the worst part of the hurricane last night, I woke this morning to the Washington Post reporting that disaster relief will have to be pulled from the Midwest to handle the East Coast hurricane problems. “With less than $1 billion currently available for federal disaster assistance, the Federal Emergency Management Agency is temporarily suspending payments to rebuild roads, schools and other structures destroyed during spring tornadoes in Joplin, Mo. and southern states in order to pay for damage caused by Hurricane Irene.” In the most recent budget negotiations the White House and lawmakers agreed on roughly $38 billion in cuts to federal spending to departments and agencies. The Republican Chair of the House Appropriations Committee blames the need for moving funding around from Joplin and the Midwest to the east cost on the President’s cuts in FEMA. “On Saturday, House Appropriations Committee Chairman Hal Rogers (R-Ky.) urged the Senate to quickly approve the House GOP version of the annual Homeland Security spending measure that includes $1 billion for additional disaster funding this year and $2.65 billion for fiscal 2012. “Time and time again, the [Obama] administration has ignored the obvious funding needs of the Disaster Relief Fund, purposefully and irresponsibly underfunding the account and putting families and communities who have suffered from terrible disasters on the back burner,” Rogers said. “Now the administration has let the fund reach critically low levels, putting continued recovery at risk, without a plan for the future or a clear method for dealing with new disasters.” The House Appropriations Committee details some of the $38B cuts in this PDF including “reduces FEMA first responder grants by $786 million, eliminates $264 million in funding that was previously targeted to earmarks, and rescinds $557 million in unobligated and lapsed balances from prior year funds.” These were cuts approved by Chairman Rogers own committee that he’s blaming on the President. The Continuing Resolution set to maintain our country until we were able to pass an actual budget was passed earlier this year. According to Chairman Rogers’s own Committee Summary of the bill the CR also reports (emphasis mine) “The National Weather Service, of course, is part of NOAA — its funding drops by $126 million. The CR also reduces funding for FEMA management by $24.3 million off of the FY2010 budget, and reduces that appropriation by $783.3 million for FEMA state and local programs. ” In that same WaPo piece tea party Republican Rep. Eric Cantor says that they will get the money needed for FEMA from other places. I guess he means the needs for the east cost are going to come from Joplin. Cantor was also caught with his tea party cuts around his knees earlier this week when the Virginia earthquake hit it was also discovered that Cantor was holding disaster aid for earthquakes hostage unless there were other spending cuts. In related news the New York Times reported a few weeks ago the disapproval rating for the tea party has doubled since last year to 40 percent.
Continue reading …Related Articles Hurricane Irene, August 28: as it happened 28 Aug 2011 US politicians, the media and the apocalypse that never was 28 Aug 2011 New Yorkers play in the rain 28 Aug 2011 Hurricane reporter broadcasts covered in sewage 28 Aug 2011 Hurricane Irene: two nuclear power plants shut down 28 Aug 2011 Come on Irene: New York is ready to ride out the storm 27 Aug 2011 Although the city of New York escaped relatively unscathed, at least 19 people were killed as Hurricane Irene barrelled up the eastern seaboard over the weekend, and more fatalities were expected to be confirmed. An 11-year-old boy died when a tree fell through the roof of his house in North Carolina. A woman in Maryland…
Continue reading …Politicians issued dramatic warnings but their fears were unfounded and some say they went too far Hurricane Irene dumped vast amounts of water on the eastern US at the weekend, cut electricity to millions of people and prompted warnings of extensive flash flooding further inland. But ultimately the storm failed to deliver the catastrophic blow politicians had feared when they ordered the evacuation of more than 2 million people, shut down public transport in New York and other cities, and put the military on alert. The category 1 winds – the lowest on the hurricane scale – may not have packed as much of a punch as other storms, but Irene’s vast size, more than 400 miles wide, and slow speed, made it particularly threatening. It took 12 hours or more to pass overhead, wreaking damage estimated in the hundreds of millions of dollars. The hurricane, downgraded to a tropical storm shortly before it reached New York as its winds fell to about 65mph, delivered up to eight inches of rain in places, leading to warnings of river floods over the coming days. It caused some flooding in coastal towns and in homes in parts of New York, with water up to people’s thighs, but fell far short of what had been predicted by some officials. Fifteen people were confirmed dead, including two children. The US homeland security chief, Janet Napolitano, attributed the lower than expected death toll to extensive warnings and mass evacuations. But as Irene proved to be less dramatic than had been predicted, some questioned whether the authorities had gone too far. The mayor of New York, Michael Bloomberg, defended the mass evacuation and the dramatic warnings. “We were unwilling to risk the life of a single New Yorker. The bottom line is that I would make the same decisions again, without hesitation. We can’t just, when a hurricane is coming, get out of the way and hope for the best,” he said. New York was expected to be back to business on Monday, with markets and offices open, but officials were warning that travel would be difficult. The preparations for Irene were made with half an eye on the damage wreaked on New Orleans six years ago, when Hurricane Katrina claimed nearly 2,000 lives, wrecking entire neighbourhoods and political careers. Caution was the watchword as people from the Carolinas to New York were ordered to leave their homes. Bloomberg ordered the mandatory evacuation of 300,000 people from low-lying areas of New York and threatened to have the police kick down the doors of people who refused to leave. “Time is running out,” he said hours before the storm arrived. “If you haven’t left you should leave now. Not later this evening, not this afternoon, immediately.” Chris Christie, the governor of neighbouring New Jersey, was even blunter: “Get the hell off the beach.” The warnings were repeated by politicians and television stations along the coast. Get out of your house, this is worse than you imagine, don’t expect us to come and rescue you if you don’t. The mood was not helped by last week’s unusual earthquake which rocked buildings along the east coast, from Virginia to New York. People pulled back from the North Carolina coast and the seaside resorts of Virginia Beach, Ocean City in Maryland and Atlantic City in New Jersey. Some defiantly painted “Come on, Irene” – a play on the Dexys Midnight Runners hit of the 1980s – on plywood hastily nailed over windows before getting out of town. New York shut down its subway system, a rare event. So did Boston. Airports closed and intercity trains stopped running. Grey warships sailed out of the military dock in Norfolk, Virginia, to ride out the storm at sea. Television reporters positioned themselves to appear live on camera clinging to poles as the storm lashed around them. Some did not bow to the pressure. About 600 elderly people living in high rise flats in Atlantic City refused to move. “I can’t make you … I’m not going to arrest you (but) let us walk you downstairs and put you on those buses,” Christie pleaded. Instead, residents of the 13-storey Best of Life Park held a “Goodnight Irene” party on Saturday as the storm moved in. In New York, ABC News estimated that more than 20% of people living in the mandatory evacuation zone had refused to move, despite police and city officials going door to door. Irene finally slammed into the North Carolina coast near Cape Lookout after daybreak on Saturday. Bit by bit it claimed lives. There may be undiscovered fatalities. The known 15 included a surfer caught in a rip current off the Virginia coast as he made the most of the huge waves. Two children died in the storm – an 11 year-old boy hit by a tree that fell on his house and a girl, 15, in a car crash. In New Jersey on Sunday a woman was found drowned in her car hours after she called the emergency services because she was trapped on a flooded road. A firefighter died trying to save another person. Others were lucky. Two men were rescued off Staten Island after they capsized while kayaking as the first tentacles of the storm began to lash the area. Bloomberg was angry, saying that rescue workers had risked their lives to save the men who were then given tickets. The waters washed through town after town. In Darby, Philadelphia, the waters rose so high that the mayor, Michael Nutter, said they were sending “couches, furniture, all kinds of stuff floating down the street”. The winds were strong enough to rip trees out of the ground and tear off branches, which in turn tore down power lines. More than 3 million people were left without electricity as the storm passed over, mostly in Virginia, New York and New Jersey. It is likely to take days to restore power. In Maryland, the hurricane forced an emergency shutdown of a nuclear reactor after it was hit by debris thrown around by the winds. The owners issued a statement saying there was no danger, but some people felt a flicker of doubt fuelled by the earthquake and tsunami disaster in Japan earlier this year. In a sign that the storm both proved not to be as fearsome as once threatened and that the evacuations had paid off, the cost of Irene was mostly being assessed in dollars not human lives. Christie said: “I’ve got to imagine that the damage estimates are going to be in the billions of dollars, if not in the tens of billions of dollars.” However, he added that there is likely to be more damage yet. Even as the storm moved on, the danger had not passed. The torrential rains come on top of a particularly wet summer. The additional water is expected to take a day or two to cause rivers to crest, creating a concern of flooding far inland from the coast. “Inland flooding of our rivers is at record levels,” said Christie. “It’s only going to get worse in the next few days. Do not leave your homes. Flooding is going to be the big problem. There’s saturated ground, swelled rivers.” Warnings of flash floods were issued as far north as Vermont on the Canadian border. Still, to the relief of politicians and every one else, Katrina it was not. Hurricane Irene Natural disasters and extreme weather New York United States Michael Bloomberg Chris McGreal guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …You want to see a revolution, Rep. Cantor? Just keep it up, you little twerp: WASHINGTON — As East Coasters brace for what some say will be a historic pummel by Hurricane Irene, at least one lawmaker is fuming over a requirement by House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) that any potential emergency disaster aid be offset by spending cuts. “It is sinful to require us to cut somewhere … in order to provide emergency disaster assistance for American citizens,” Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.) told The Huffington Post on Friday. The Louisiana Democrat pointed out that this weekend is the sixth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, which devastated his district and cost the federal government more than $100 billion. That recovery effort would have been delayed “by years” if Congress had required the same kind of spending cuts to offset aid, he said. “I have been one who has been preparing for the hurricane, trying to give people some comfort. One thing they need to know is the federal government can come to their aid,” Richmond said. “I don’t think we’re in a position, given the rules set up by the majority, that we’re going to be able to come to their aid quickly.” Cantor raised some eyebrows on Wednesday when, in the aftermath of the 5.8 magnitude earthquake that rattled the East Coast and originated in his district, he said Congress will help those hurt by the earthquake but will require finding offsets for any federal aid. “When there’s a disaster there’s an appropriate federal role and we will find the monies,” Cantor said during a news conference in Mineral, Va. “But we’ve had discussions about these things before and those monies will be offset with appropriate savings or cost-cutting elsewhere in order to meet the priority of the federal government’s role in a situation like this.” Obama didn’t seek emergency aid when the country endured its last major natural disaster. Back in May, when storms ravaged the Midwest, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) was able to eat the costs with funds it had set aside for such disasters. The same scuffle over requiring offsets surfaced during that fight, but then disappeared since the president never made a request. The difference this time around is that FEMA is closer to running out of money, which makes the prospect of an emergency aid request more likely in the event of widespread destruction. What is “scary” is how spread thin FEMA is, said a House Democratic aide familiar with disaster relief operations. FEMA is now running relief operations “in every single state” due to a record number of disasters this year, said the aide, and the agency has been projected to run out of money by the end of September..
Continue reading …Click here to view this media I can hardly believe I’m saying this, but I’m going to give props to Christie, who did a great job convincing people to take this storm seriously. There was serious damage and substantial flooding in New Jersey, and thanks to his blunt statements, he managed to persuade most of the people in harm’s way to evacuate. Reports of damage are still coming in from all over the state, which is why I was surprised by phone calls this morning from friends saying, “No big deal.” Really? One of my friends, who lives at the beach, had a tornado touch down near her house. It took out a couple of houses, the roof of an apartment building, and threw high-velocity debris all over the area. None of that has appeared on the news. (Oh, and her local beach was completely washed away.) Here’s Gov. Christie, interviewed by Jake Tapper for This Week With Christiane Amanour: TAPPER: As we’ve been telling you, New Jersey is getting hit hard by the storm right now. New Jersey’s governor, Chris Christie, is monitoring the situation from the Regional Operations Intelligence Center in Ewing, New Jersey. He joins us right now. Governor Christie, thanks for coming onto the show. CHRISTIE: Thanks for having me, Jake. TAPPER: So, Governor, the hurricane made landfall in New Jersey shortly before 6:00 this morning. Your state’s just beginning to weather the storm. What are the early reports telling you? CHRISTIE: Early reports are very difficult, Jake. We have over half-a-million people that are now without power. We have 15,000 people in 45 shelters across the state; 250 roads are closed; and we are going to look at a record flooding situation here, both at the shore and inland. And so my message to the people of New Jersey is, the eye of the storm is still over the state. We are far from out of the woods on the storm itself. And I urge people to stay inside their homes. The one report we have this morning of a woman who’s missing is someone who went out into their car, drove, got into the water, got out of her car, and was swept away in the water and is still missing. So, please, stay in your homes until the storm has completely left New Jersey. Then we’ll be able to get through this together in the aftermath, but I need people to stay at home. TAPPER: What is your biggest concern right now? What kept you last night? CHRISTIE: Flooding, Jake, because we had the wettest August on record in parts of New Jersey before this storm. Already, we’ve had six to eight inches of rain dumped on south Jersey, and the rain is continuing throughout the state. And so what I’m really worried about is flooding at this point and having to evacuate even more people than the 15,000 we’ve already had to evacuate and shelter. So in the short term, in the next couple of days, my big concern is the inland flooding and the shore flooding and how we’re going to deal with folks who maybe have to be evacuated from their homes and need to be sheltered. TAPPER: Is there anything that the state of New Jersey needs from the federal government that you’re not getting? CHRISTIE: Not at this point, Jake. We have FEMA representatives here at the — at the Regional Operations and Intelligence Center, been working with us. I’m going to be calling Secretary Napolitano in an hour or two to make a further request of additional needs. But so far, FEMA has been very responsive. I spoke to Secretary Napolitano in the last 24 hours. She’s offered to do whatever she needs to do to help us out here in New Jersey. She knows how hard we’re going to be hit. So right now, the cooperation between New Jersey and FEMA has been great, and I’m going to be calling Secretary Napolitano shortly to ask for some more help. TAPPER: I know you were very concerned about the — at the time, it was 600 seniors in these Atlantic City high rises who were not leaving. What can you tell us about efforts to protect them? CHRISTIE: Well, our last-ditch efforts that I referenced yesterday afternoon got another 100 or so to leave and to evacuate. So now we’re dealing with about 500 seniors who refuse to evacuate. And as soon as it’s safe to travel there, I know county OEM, Office of Emergency Management, Atlantic County is already checking on these folks to make sure they’re OK. They lost power in a number of the buildings as early as 10 o’clock last night. So the county officials in Atlantic County are going to check on those folks. And as soon as we have some reports, we’ll be able to share them with the public. TAPPER: Why do people not leave their homes at times like this? CHRISTIE: You know, I think it’s a combination of things. You know, Jake, New Jerseyans are especially tough, kind of cynical, hard-edged folks, and they think the “cry wolf” syndrome, you know, it’s all over TV, but it’s never as bad as they’re telling you it will be, that’s one of the reasons . Another reason is that people are very scared, they want to protect their property. And thirdly, especially with the elderly, you know, we had one 92-year-old woman say to us yesterday, “I’m 92 years old. If I die, this is where I want to die.” And so I think it’s a combination of all those things that make people not heed the warnings. But the good news is that we evaluated over a million people from the Jersey shore in 24 hours without incident. And if those people had stayed at the Jersey shore, I think we’d be talking about significant loss of life. And now, hopefully, we’re not going to be talking about that. TAPPER: All right. Governor Chris Christie, thanks for joining us. Stay safe. CHRISTIE: Jake, thank you very much for having me.
Continue reading …Click here to view this media A 24-year-old Oregon man — who told police that he was a “Christian warrior” — has been charged with a hate crime for allegedly firebombing a mosque last November. Cody Crawford faces 10 to 30 years if convicted of firebombing the Salman Alfarisi Islamic Center, which is about 200 feet from his house. Although his DNA has been connected to the crime scene, Crawford has maintained that he’s “100 percent innocent.” In an unrelated incident, Crawford had ranted to police about Muslims, according to court documents . “You look like Obama,” he said to a McMinnville officer in December. “You are a Muslim like him. Jihad goes both ways. Christians can jihad too.” The documents reveal that Crawford also told authorities that “only Christians could understand him, that he was a Christian warrior that they were persecuting.” “You will never know the truth about the mosque,” he allegedly said. The firebombing came just two days after Mohamed Osman Mohamud, who had occasionally attended the mosque, was arrested in connection with a plot to bomb a Christmas tree lighting ceremony Portland. Mohamud’s plot was reportedly uncovered with help from the Muslim community. Mozafar Wanly, who also worships at the Corvallis Mosque, believes that Crawford’s alleged crimes were based on a ignorance. “I would say to him, ‘I think you misunderstand Islam. Islam is the religion of the love. We love everybody. You are misunderstanding us,’” Wanly said .
Continue reading …Fortitude1913 says: RT @ TVGuide : Melissa Gilbert and Bruce Boxleitner are divorcing http://t.co/urgtUlc
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