Sunday, May 26, 2013

Posts Tagged ‘wave’

Eastern U.S. battles heat wave amid power outages

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Blistering heat blanketed much of the eastern United States for the third straight day on Sunday, after violent storms that took at least a dozen lives and knocked out power to more than 3 million customers.

Emergencies were declared in Maryland, Ohio, Virginia, West Virginia and Washington, D.C., on Saturday because of damage from storms that unleashed hurricane-force winds across and a 500-mile (800-km) stretch of the mid-Atlantic region.

The storms’ rampage came as sweltering temperatures topped 100 Fahrenheit (38 Celsius) in several southern cities, including Atlanta, where the mercury hit an all-time record of 106 degrees (41 Celsius), according to Accuweather.com.

Over two dozen cities across 10 states set or tied all-time record high temperatures on Friday and Saturday, including Columbia, South Carolina; Knoxville, Tennessee; and Raleigh, North Carolina.

The heat wave continued Sunday for millions of people from the Plains to the mid-Atlantic.

One of the hardest hit cities was Charlotte, North Carolina, where the mercury hovered at about 101 degrees (38.3 C) Sunday afternoon and was expected to at least tie its all-time record of 104 (40 C) later in the day.

From St. Louis, Missouri, to Washington, D.C., the forecasts were for temperatures that could climb to more all-time records.

“It is very unsafe outdoors for those susceptible to these extreme conditions,” the National Weather Service said in a statement.

‘CATASTROPHIC DAMAGE” TO POWER GRIDS

Power crews worked to restore service to homes and businesses, and officials in some areas said the job could take up to a week. Utilities in Ohio, Virginia and Maryland described damage to their power grids as catastrophic.

Six people were killed in Virginia in storm-related incidents, and more than 1 million customers were left without power in the worst outage not linked to a hurricane in the state’s history, said Bob Spieldenner, a spokesman for the Virginia Department of Emergency Management.

Two Maryland residents died in the storm – one struck by a falling tree in Anne Arundel County, the other electrocuted after a tree crashed into a house in Montgomery County – said state emergency management agency spokesman Edward Hopkins.

In a late Sunday morning update, Maryland Emergency Management Agency spokesman Ed McDonough said a Chesapeake Bay boater was still missing after the storm and 639,000 customers remained without power. That was down from more than 1 million Maryland customers without lights and crucial air conditioning earlier on Sunday morning.

In New Jersey, two cousins aged 2 and 7 were killed by a falling tree in a state park. And in eastern Tennessee, heat was blamed for the deaths of two brothers, ages 3 and 5, in Bradley County. They had been playing outside in 105-degree (41-degree C) heat.

HEATED LABOR DISPUTE

Ohio, where one storm-related death was reported, faced similar difficulties. Outages hit two-thirds of the state with about 1 million homes and businesses left without electricity. Governor John Kasich said it could take a week to fully restore power.

President Barack Obama authorized the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to coordinate all disaster relief efforts in the storm-ravaged state.

West Virginia was also hard-hit by storm-related outages, with about 614,000 customers without power, said Terrance Lively, spokesman for the state emergency management agency.

Further north, the storm caused outages from Indiana, where 135,000 customers lost power, to New Jersey, where Atlantic County declared a state of emergency and at least 206,000 customers were without power.

In New York, a heated labor dispute threatened to compound problems posed by the summer heat wave, which has already put an added strain on the electrical grid for New York City and suburban Westchester county.

Power utility Consolidated Edison Inc locked out its unionized workers early on Sunday after contract talks broke down, both sides said, raising the possibility of power cuts.

The company said it had asked to extend negotiations for two more weeks but the union, which had threatened a strike by its 8,500 workers over a new contract, refused. In response, the firm told union members not to report for work on Sunday.

That left managers and any crews the company can hire to fix whatever problems arise as 8.2 million New Yorkers crank up their air conditioners to beat the heat.

Records for June were broken on Friday in Nashville, Tennessee; Louisville, Kentucky; Washington, D.C., and Atlanta. The temperature hit at least 104 F (40 C) in all four cities, according to the National Weather Service.

(Additional reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles, Paul Thomasch in New York, Susan Guyett in Indianapolis, Tim Ghianni in Nashville and Alistair Bull in Washington; Editing by Tom Brown, Sandra Maler and Vicki Allen)

U.S. News Headlines – Yahoo! News

Another polarized ‘wave’ election – Philadelphia Inquirer



Posted on Sun, Nov. 7, 2010

Soon, the newly elected members of the coming Republican U.S. House majority will troop to Washington to fill out their federal-employee paperwork, hire staff, and get a suite in one of the three Capitol office buildings lining Independence Avenue.

They might not want to get too comfortable.

Voters last week ousted at least 60 House Democrats, producing the biggest midterm partisan shift in more than seven decades. More important, Tuesday’s was the second such “wave” election in four years, reflecting an increased volatility in the nation’s politics.

In 1994, voters gave control of the House to the GOP for the first time in 40 years. But in 2006, Democrats got it back as the midterm elections became a referendum on the unpopular Iraq war and the presidency of George W. Bush. The party’s gains continued in 2008, when it picked up 21 seats as President Obama was elected.

Experts who study voting trends trace the phenomenon to accelerating polarization of the two parties, with Republicans growing more conservative and Democrats more liberal, leaving a large bloc of unattached moderates up for grabs. At least since 2000, this has led to close presidential elections and more frequent switches in control of Congress.

The worst economic downturn since the Great Depression only added to the ferment in 2010.

“A lot of these people in the middle of the spectrum are searching for answers: ‘We need a change, a new direction,’ ” said Daniel Shea, a political scientist who directs the Allegheny College Center for Political Participation.

“The big question is: What happens in the next election?” Shea said. “If things haven’t turned around, and independents are still scrambling for solutions, who are they going to blame?”

Republican leaders acknowledge that they may lose the House in 2012 if their prescription of tax cuts and less government spending does not deliver. But likely incoming Speaker John Boehner (R., Ohio) also claimed a mandate, saying Tuesday’s result was a “repudiation” of Washington’s direction under the Democrats.

Media exit polls taken Tuesday, however, are replete with evidence that many voters were not wild about the GOP, either. For instance, 58 percent of independents surveyed said they viewed Democrats unfavorably, while 57 percent said they had negative views of Republicans.

Voters in the polls were divided on top GOP policy priorities – 48 percent said Congress should repeal the Obama administration’s health-care overhaul, but 47 percent said it should be kept as is or expanded. And 39 percent said Washington’s top priority should be to reduce the budget deficit, while 37 percent said it should be to spend more money to create jobs.

“We are still really the 50-50 nation we showed ourselves to be in the 2000 election, and all of the waves and national events are really only pushing us from one party to another,” said Lara M. Brown, assistant professor of political science at Villanova University.

“At the end of the day,” she said, “no party has dominance, and no party should read these wins as ideological mandates to pursue their partisan agenda.”

The nation has gone through such stretches before; indeed, some historians are reminded of the Gilded Age of the 1890s, when corruption, along with financial and social upheavals, led to wide swings in House control. Eventually, the era gave rise to the progressive movement.

“It’s a period that, in many ways, I think, suggests some disturbing parallels to our own,” Stanford University historian David M. Kennedy said during a discussion Wednesday on WBUR-FM, a Boston public radio station. “There were major issues that were brewing on the national political agenda, having to do with industrial growth and regulation, immigration, foreign policy – all of which went largely unattended to because of the incoherence and instability and indecisiveness of that national political system.”

In 1894, the GOP won a landslide midterm, picking up 135 seats in a smaller House (it then had 357 seats, instead of today’s 435). Unemployment ranged from 12 percent to 18 percent, and voters blamed Democratic President Grover Cleveland and his party’s congressional leaders.

But two years later, the GOP lost 48 seats, even as Republican William McKinley won the presidential race. In the 1910 midterms, the Democrats took advantage of infighting between liberal and conservative wings of the GOP to pick up 57 seats. They grabbed 82 more and the presidency two years later.

The two parties alternated losing seats during World War I and the Roaring Twenties. With the Depression, there was a massive realignment, and Democrats dominated Congress for decades, with a few exceptions in the post-World War II years of economic stagnation.

Various forces have led each major party to become more ideologically “pure,” said Shea, of Allegheny College. They include the civil rights movement, which gradually drove most Southern conservatives to the GOP, and the rise of evangelical right-wing activists in the 1980s, which began the flight of many liberals and moderates from the Republican Party.

A Zogby International Poll before Tuesday’s election found that a majority of independent voters said they wanted political leaders who were “flexible” and open to compromise. When partisan voters were added into the mix, compromise was less popular overall.

In September, a national survey of registered voters conducted for Allegheny College found that 44 percent believed it was important for politicians to compromise, while 52 percent would prefer leaders who stood firm on principles.

Some analysts wonder whether the political instability will continue, and ask how a polarized country can work out solutions to its long-deferred difficult problems, such as the national debt and the underfunding of the Social Security and Medicare programs.

Yet Curtis Gans, director of American University’s Center for the Study of the American Electorate, thinks the patterns fueling recent upheaval in House elections – restless independents and depressed turnout among voters affiliated with the party in power – are not inevitable.

“It will stop when people feel their government is working,” Gans said. “The public has shown it’s not averse to continuity . . . when people think the country is headed in the right direction.”


Contact staff writer Thomas Fitzgerald at 215-854-2718

Nation – Google News

Greece Suspends Outgoing Airmail After Wave of Bombs – New York Times

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Globe and Mail
Greece Suspends Outgoing Airmail After Wave of Bombs
New York Times
BERLIN A package bomb addressed to Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, was found in the chancellery's mailroom. By MICHAEL SLACKMAN and NIKI KITSANTONIS BERLIN — A package bomb addressed to the German chancellor and shipped by air from Greece was
Greece suspends shipments after bombingsCNN International
Greece halts mail, hunts for suspectsThe Associated Press
Bomb fears halt Greek mail serviceThe Press Association
Washington Post -Scotsman -BusinessWeek
all 2,318 news articles »

World – Google News

Republican election wave hits US state houses – Reuters

CHICAGO |
Wed Nov 3, 2010 6:45am EDT

CHICAGO (Reuters) – The surge that gave Republicans control of the House of Representatives on Tuesday also hit state legislatures, where the Republican Party was on track for historic gains.

In most states, legislatures will be redrawing electoral districts for the House of Representatives in Washington — an adjustment of boundaries every 10 years that tends to favor the party in charge of each state house.

The big Republican Party wins at the state level give it the edge in reinforcing its strength in the House.

Republicans took control of at least 17 chambers from Democrats, according to Tim Storey, an elections analyst at the bipartisan National Conference of State Legislatures.

“The Republicans really swamped the Democrats,” he said on Wednesday, adding that Republicans will be in the best position for controlling congressional redistricting since the modern era of remapping began in the 1970s.

The party in control of the White House almost always loses legislative seats in midterm elections and 2010 was no exception.

Republicans saw a net gain of at least 500 seats, giving them control of chambers in states such as Alabama, Indiana, Iowa, Maine, Minnesota, Michigan, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, the NCSL reported.

In the South, Republicans will control 18 of 28 chambers, Storey said. Alabama’s legislative election marked the first time Republicans will head both chambers since reconstruction. In North Carolina, Republicans have not controlled the state Senate since 1870, according to the NCSL.

Storey said probably five more chambers remain in play, including the New York Senate.

Heading into Tuesday’s election to fill more than 80 percent of the nation’s 7,382 state legislative seats, Democrats controlled both chambers in 27 state legislatures and Republicans were dominant in 14.

Control was split in eight states, while Nebraska’s single-chamber legislature is nonpartisan.

(Reporting by Karen Pierog)

Nation – Google News

 

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