IMS beefs up security as Indy 500 nears

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:03:02 GMT

IMS beefs up security as Indy 500 nears INDIANAPOLIS -- Crowds at the 107th running of the Indianapolis 500 are expected to be back at pre-pandemic levels. IMS is beefing up security and has some key tips to keep in mind if you're planning on coming to the track this weekend."I can tell you that this year's crowd is going to be the best crowd that we've had in the last 25 years. With the exception of 2016," said IMS President, Doug Boles. With that many people in one spot, IMS says security is top of mind. This year, IMS will be using the new CEIA OPENGATE® devices.The screening devices allow fans to be screened without emptying their coolers, pockets or removing any clothing.   "If you go through the gates and you have things that you should not have, some of those prohibited items, especially weapons, it will flag and you will have to go to a secondary screening and we will definitely find it," said Boles.Safety doesn't stop there. Traffic will be a big focus this weekend. Speedwa...

MAP: Which school districts have increased teacher pay for the 2023-24 school year?

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:03:02 GMT

MAP: Which school districts have increased teacher pay for the 2023-24 school year? AUSTIN (KXAN) — Ahead of the upcoming school year, several districts are looking to attract new teachers by increasing salaries.The budget decisions come as state lawmakers fight over school choice and teacher pay at the Capitol. Several districts are waiting to see what, if anything, the legislature requires before setting salary schedules. Others will be finalizing budgets over the coming months.KXAN reached out to all 58 school districts in our viewing area to compare starting salaries across the board. The maps below show salaries in each district for new teachers with no experience.Of the districts that have released new pay scales for the 2023-24 school year, Del Valle ISD is offering the highest starting salary, at $58,000. That's a 7.4% increase, or $4,000, over 2022-23."Del Valle ISD teachers and staff are the heart of the district, providing our students with care and love," Superintendent Dr. Annette Tielle said in a press release. "Our raises over the past...

St. Paul school budget plan calls for more spending than revenue

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:03:02 GMT

St. Paul school budget plan calls for more spending than revenue Even with a big increase in state aid coming, St. Paul Public Schools plans to spend more than it takes in next year.The second round of federal coronavirus relief grants expires in September, and district leaders aren’t ready to eliminate promising grant-funded initiatives like elementary reading specialists. They’re proposing to spend $23 million in general fund reserves next year to maintain that program and others.A preliminary budget outline presented to the school board Tuesday projected $51.8 million in new money from the state, thanks largely to legislative efforts to reduce cross-subsidies for English learners and special education and a 4 percent increase to the per-pupil formula; the actual number should be a bit higher as the district didn’t account for new state money to cover summer unemployment insurance payments to hourly workers.However, the district also calculated $76.4 million in line items that will hurt the budget, including a $12.8 million revenue loss due to ...

81-year-old suspect in Willmar cold-case homicide dies in custody

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:03:02 GMT

81-year-old suspect in Willmar cold-case homicide dies in custody WILLMAR, Minn. — The 81-year-old former Willmar man charged with murder in a 1974 stabbing death in the west-central Minnesota community has died.Algene Leeland Vossen was charged in 2020 with second-degree murder after a cold-case homicide investigation into the killing of 74-year-old Mae Herman in her Willmar home identified him as a suspect. The criminal case has now been dismissed.First Assistant Kandiyohi County Attorney Kristen Pierce notified the court Monday.Vossen had been a patient at Unity Point Hospital in Des Moines, Iowa, and under 24-hour electronic monitoring by caretakers and staff since June of 2022. According to court documents, Vossen died there May 15.Algene Vossen. (Minnehaha County Sheriff’s Office)The Kandiyohi County attorney’s office filed a petition in August 2022 to have Vossen committed as mentally ill and dangerous. In that separate civil commitment proceeding, Kandiyohi County District Judge Stephen Wentzell in February had ordered a six-month co...

Franklin, Weinstein: Ventilators and the learning curve of COVID-19 treatment

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:03:02 GMT

Franklin, Weinstein: Ventilators and the learning curve of COVID-19 treatment An axiom in medicine is that good judgment depends on experience, and experience depends on bad judgment. Basically, one way doctors refine their care is through a learning curve resulting from inexperience and lack of judgment.A fitting example during the COVID-19 pandemic was the worldwide experience with ventilators, which are used to support lung function in patients with serious COVID-19 pneumonia.Viruses or bacteria that invade the lungs and cause pneumonia impair the body’s ability to take in oxygen. When this becomes severe, it is known as hypoxemia (this is what those finger oximeters measure.) In advanced hypoxemia, patients experience shortness of breath. If it worsens they will be unable to breathe. At that point, doctors will insert a tube in the windpipe and attach the tube to a ventilator, which takes over a patient’s breathing until the lungs heal.In March 2020, with COVID-19 ravaging Italy, western Europe and New York City, deaths from COVID-19 pneumonia...

Farhad Manjoo: A.I. Photoshopping is about to get very easy. Maybe too easy.

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:03:02 GMT

Farhad Manjoo: A.I. Photoshopping is about to get very easy. Maybe too easy. Photoshop is the granddaddy of image-editing apps, the O.G. of our airbrushed, Facetuned media ecosystem and a product so enmeshed in the culture that it’s a verb, an adjective and a frequent lament of rappers. Photoshop is also widely used. More than 30 years since the first version was released, professional photographers, graphic designers and other visual artists the world over reach for the app to edit much of the imagery you see online, in print and on billboards, bus stops, posters, product packaging and anything else the light touches.So what does it mean that Photoshop is diving into generative artificial intelligence — that a just-released beta feature called Generative Fill will allow you to photorealistically render just about any imagery you ask of it? (Subject, of course, to terms of service.)Merging reality and digital artifaceNot just that, actually: So many AI image generators have been released over the past year or so that the idea of prompting a computer to creat...

St. Paul entrepreneur’s lease app among Carlson School’s MN Cup 89 semi-finalists for start-up competition

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:03:02 GMT

St. Paul entrepreneur’s lease app among Carlson School’s MN Cup 89 semi-finalists for start-up competition At a time when many housing advocates are focused on stabilizing renters in precarious living situations, Abu Nayeem is thinking differently. His new web-based service, GetPreLease.com, aims to help renters evaluate themselves — by credit history, by criminal history and more — so they understand their own red flags and can better negotiate new leases in even better apartments.“We hear about housing stability, which means you can only afford your current home,” said Nayeem, a co-founder and chief executive officer of the web start-up Pre-Lease SBC, which is based in St. Paul’s Midway neighborhood. “We want to create mobility for renters.”For the second year in a row, GetPreLease.com has caught the attention of the MN Cup, a statewide start-up competition hosted for the past 19 years by the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management, as have a host of other east metro companies just beginning to get off the ground.Nearly 90 ...

Teen struck by car on Washington Avenue in Albany

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:03:02 GMT

Teen struck by car on Washington Avenue in Albany ALBANY, N.Y. (NEWS10) -- A teenager was sent to the hospital after he was hit by a car in Albany on Thursday. The 14-year-old boy was struck on Washington Avenue between North Main Avenue and Partridge Street. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! Police said the boy was conscious but sustained serious, non-life threatening injuries. He was taken to Albany Medical Center.The driver stayed at the scene and has been cooperating with police.

Boat safety reminders ahead of Memorial Day weekend

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:03:02 GMT

Boat safety reminders ahead of Memorial Day weekend (NEWS10) -- Law enforcement officials are partnering with advocates to highlight boat safety measures ahead of Memorial Day Weekend.Experts said it's important to be equipped with safety tools, including life jackets and devices that shut off boat engines if a boater falls into the water. One woman whose son drowned in 2016 said open water activities can be dangerous even for avid swimmers. Get the latest, news, weather, sports and community events delivered right to your inbox! "Expect the unexpected," Teresa Dabiere-Craig said. "Anything can happen out there. Open water is very different than swimming in a pool."The U.S. Coast Guard said more than 80 percent of those who drown in open water were not wearing life jackets.

Why Gov. Mike Parson picked Gabe Gore as the next St. Louis Circuit Attorney

Published Mon, 11 Nov 2024 21:03:02 GMT

Why Gov. Mike Parson picked Gabe Gore as the next St. Louis Circuit Attorney JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. - After weeks of drama that put St. Louis in the national spotlight, Gabe Gore will be sworn on Tuesday as the city's new top prosecutor.Governor Mike Parson's legal counsel Evan Rodriguez has been serving as interim circuit attorney since Kim Gardner abruptly resigned last week, discovering 4,800 warrant applications that have not been reviewed.In an exclusive interview with our Missouri Chief Capitol Bureau Reporter Emily Manley, Parson said he tried to reach out to Gardner after she announced her resignation, but said he never heard back."I don't know if I was expecting her too, it would have been nice to have a conversation to say, 'How do we move forward to help the people of St. Louis, but that didn't occur,'" Parson said. Franklin County man added to FBI’s Ten Most Wanted list With a backlog of thousands of cases, Gabe Gore will have his hands full. Gore lives and works, and has raised his family in St. Louis, all reasons why Parson said he appointed the...