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Minggu, 28 Februari 2021

Virginia lawmakers pass legislation that will legalize marijuana in 2024 - NBC News

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Virginia lawmakers approved a bill on Saturday that would legalize the sale and recreational use of marijuana — but not until 2024.

The historic move makes Virginia the first Southern state to vote to legalize marijuana, joining 15 other states and the District of Columbia. The legislation now goes to Democratic Gov. Ralph Northam, who supports legalization, for his signature.

"It's been a lot of work to get here, but I would say that we're on the path to an equitable law allowing responsible adults to use cannabis,” State Sen. Adam Ebbin, the chief sponsor of the Senate bill, told the Associated Press.

Virginia House Speaker Eileen Filler-Corn applauded her colleagues in both chambers for passing the measure.

“The House and Senate took a strong step in legalizing the sale and possession of Marijuana here in the Commonwealth,” said Filler-Corn on Twitter. “This legislation will make our criminal justice system fairer and help end the targeting of black and brown communities over the possession of cannabis.”

Still, some Democrats like state Sen. Jennifer McClellan called on Northam to amend the bill, including legalizing marijuana sooner.

“We still have a long way to go to ensure we address the disproportionate impact marijuana prohibition has had on Black and brown communities,” McClellan tweeted. She called on Gov. Northam to amend the bill so that simple possession would become legal this year.

Northam’s spokeswoman, Alena Yarmosky, said the governor “looks forward to continuing to improve this legislation.”

“There's still a lot of work ahead, but this bill will help to reinvest in our communities and reduce inequities in our criminal justice system,” Yarmosky told NBC Washington.

Under the legislation as passed, possession of up to an ounce (28.3 grams) of marijuana will become legal beginning Jan. 1, 2024. At the same time, sales will begin and regulations will go into effect to control the marijuana marketplace in Virginia.

The Senate had sought to legalize simple possession this year to immediately end punishments for people with small amounts of marijuana, but House Democrats argued that legalization without a legal market for marijuana could continue to promote the growth of the black market.

Lawmakers last year decriminalized marijuana, making simple possession a civil penalty that can be punished by a fine of no more than $25.

Despite the bill’s major reforms, the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia said the new legislation does not go far enough to “break the chains of marijuana prohibition.”

“The Virginia General Assembly failed to legalize marijuana for racial justice. Lawmakers paid lip service to the communities that have suffered decades of harm caused by the racist War on Drugs with legislation that falls short of equitable reform and delays justice,” the American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia said.

The Associated Press contributed.

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New York governor faces new allegations that threaten his political future - CNN

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Now a year later, the Democratic governor is engulfed in multiple controversies that have threatened his political survival and raised serious questions about his judgment at a time when he might otherwise have been on a glide path to a fourth term in the 2022 election.
Just a few years after the #MeToo movement put a glaring spotlight on the entrenched pattern of sexual misconduct by men in powerful positions, Cuomo is facing sexual harassment allegations from two female former aides who described an unsettling power dynamic in his office that they say they are determined to call attention to.
The allegations come as Cuomo's administration is embroiled in a controversy over the state Department of Health's alleged underreporting of Covid-19 nursing home deaths and the administration's delay in providing data about those deaths to state lawmakers. The FBI and the US attorney's office in Brooklyn are examining the handling of the data. Some state lawmakers have accused Cuomo of a cover up and have said they are considering repealing the governor's emergency powers. Lawmakers are also asking whether more deaths in New York's long-term care facilities could have been prevented.

Disturbing allegations

The new sexual harassment allegation emerged Saturday evening in an article in the New York Times. Charlotte Bennett, a 25-year-old former executive assistant and health policy adviser to Cuomo, told the newspaper that during one of several uncomfortable encounters, Cuomo asked her questions about her sex life during a conversation in his State Capitol office and said he was open to relationships with women in their 20s.
She interpreted the exchange -- which she said took place in June while the state was in the throes of fighting the pandemic -- as what the newspaper called "clear overtures to a sexual relationship." CNN has reached out to Bennett for comment on the latest accusation.
Cuomo denied Bennett's allegations Saturday in a statement, saying he believed he had been acting as a mentor and that he "never made advances toward Ms. Bennett, nor did I ever intend to act in any way that was inappropriate."
"The last thing I would ever have wanted was to make her feel any of the things that are being reported," Cuomo said, saying that "she came to me and opened up about being a sexual assault survivor" and that "I tried to be supportive and helpful."
In his statement Cuomo said he had requested an "outside review" of the matter and asked that New Yorkers await the findings "before making any judgments." He called Bennett "a hardworking and valued member of our team during COVID" and said "she has every right to speak out."
Beth Garvey, special counsel and senior advisor to Cuomo, said in a statement Sunday that the governor's office has asked the New York attorney general and the chief judge of the court of appeals to jointly select an independent attorney to conduct "a thorough review" of sexual harassment claims against the governor.
The governor's office will "cooperate fully" and will not make further comment on the matter until the report is issued, Garvey said.
Bennett told the New York Times that she felt compelled to speak out about her account because she wanted to draw scrutiny to the way Cuomo "wields his power." Bennett told the Times that Cuomo did not make a physical advance on her, but the message was clear. "I understood that the governor wanted to sleep with me, and felt horribly uncomfortable and scared," she told the newspaper. "And was wondering how I was going to get out of it and assumed it was the end of my job."
Bennett agreed to speak to the New York Times last week after she shared a tweet from the account of another former Cuomo aide, Lindsey Boylan, who wrote a detailed post on Medium about her own allegations of sexual harassment against Cuomo, which his aides have said are untrue.
When tweeting Boylan's account, Bennett urged people to read it if they want to know "what it's like to work for the Cuomo (administration)."
Boylan alleged in the Medium post that Cuomo invited her to "play strip poker" during a 2017 flight on his taxpayer-funded jet while another aide was seated beside her and a state trooper behind her. In 2018, Boylan said, Cuomo stunned her by kissing her on the lips after a one-on-one briefing on economic and infrastructure projects in his New York City office.
Cuomo denied Boylan's allegations in a December news conference when she first made them.
In a statement released by the governor's press secretary on Wednesday, four other people said they were on October flights with her and that "this conversation did not happen."
CNN has not been able to corroborate the allegations, and when asked for further comment, Boylan -- who is currently running for Manhattan borough president -- replied that she was letting her Medium post speak for itself. She wrote in the post that she hoped sharing her story "will clear the path for other women to do the same."
"Governor Andrew Cuomo has created a culture within his administration where sexual harassment and bullying is so pervasive that it is not only condoned but expected," Boylan wrote. "His inappropriate behavior toward women was an affirmation that he liked you, that you must be doing something right. He used intimidation to silence his critics. And if you dared to speak up, you would face consequences."
Boylan tweeted Sunday morning that Cuomo should resign. "And if he does not resign, he should be removed from office. Not one more victim. Not one more life destroyed," she wrote.
New York State Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins, a Democrat, released a statement last week calling the Boylan accusation "disturbing."
"This is deeply disturbing. Clearly there is no place for this type of behavior in the workplace or anywhere else," Stewart-Cousins wrote.
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio -- a frequent Cuomo sparring partner -- called Sunday for the state legislature to revoke the governor's emergency powers and said that "two fully independent investigations must be held immediately into the deaths at nursing homes and the disturbing personal misconduct allegations."
Asked about the new allegations against Cuomo on CNN's "State of the Union" on Sunday, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said President Joe Biden "believes that every woman should be heard, should be treated with respect and with dignity."
"Charlotte should be treated with respect and dignity. So should Lindsey. And there should be an independent review looking into these allegations and that's certainly something he supports and we believe should move forward as quickly as possible," Psaki told CNN's Dana Bash, calling the allegations "serious" and adding that "it was hard to read that story as a woman."

An already perilous position

Now facing two sets of allegations against him that detail not only inappropriate conduct but an office culture where women say they were afraid to speak up, Cuomo will have to explain the environment that he has created over his three terms as governor. And the allegations come at a difficult time for Cuomo when some of his political adversaries are more loudly questioning his political tactics as his administration is criticized for its handling of Covid-19 data.
His administration is still reeling from the fallout from a report released in January by New York Attorney General Letitia James that revealed that the New York State Department of Health undercounted Covid-19 deaths among residents of nursing homes by approximately 50%. The governor has faced fierce criticism both for his explanation of what happened and his actions as he tried to mitigate the damage of the data reporting scandal.
More than 15,000 residents of New York's long-term care facilities have died (or are presumed to have died) from Covid-19 since the pandemic began, according to the state Department of Health. But until January, the department only reported the deaths of long-term care residents who died in a facility like a nursing home, not those who passed away after being transferred to hospitals.
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, one of the state's high-profile lawmakers in Washington, DC, has come out in favor of "a full investigation of the Cuomo administration's handling of nursing homes during COVID-19."
The confusion about the nursing home numbers led many New York lawmakers to drill the Cuomo administration for clearer answers about that data throughout last year. Earlier this month, after James' report, Cuomo's top aide Melissa DeRosa admitted in a virtual meeting with state lawmakers that the administration tried to delay the release of the data on Covid-19 deaths in long-term care facilities, because they were wary of a federal Justice Department preliminary inquiry.
During a subsequent news conference, Cuomo acknowledged that his administration did not respond "soon enough" to requests for the data on Covid-19 deaths that was being requested by lawmakers, but he said the state's death counts were accurate.
"To be clear, all the deaths in the nursing homes and in the hospitals were always fully, publicly and accurately reported," he said.
Like DeRosa, Cuomo tried to explain his administration's delay in releasing data on Covid-19 deaths to lawmakers by stating that the Department of Health "paused" state lawmakers' request for Covid-19 death data while his administration was focused on the related inquiry by the Justice Department. In a narrowly worded apology, he said the delay in providing the information to lawmakers created "a void" that allowed conspiracy theories to flourish.
"The void we created by not providing information was filled with skepticism and cynicism and conspiracy theories which furthered the confusion," Cuomo said. "We should have done a better job in providing information. We should have done a better job of knocking down the disinformation. ... I accept responsibility for that."
But that apology did not go far enough for many of the lawmakers who are delving more deeply into whether more could have been done to prevent the state's more than 47,000 deaths from the coronavirus.
In another notable allegation about the power dynamics that Cuomo has created, one lawmaker accused the governor of trying to control the fallout over the misleading data reporting about nursing home deaths by threatening his career.
Democratic Assemblyman Ron Kim, a progressive from Queens who is an outspoken critic of Cuomo, alleged that during a phone call with the governor earlier this month, Cuomo threatened his career if he "did not cover up for Melissa (DeRosa) and what she said."
Recounting the conversation, Kim told CNN that Cuomo said: "We're in this business together and we don't cross certain lines" and added that "I hadn't seen his wrath and that he can destroy me."
Rich Azzopardi, Cuomo's senior adviser, said the allegation that Cuomo threatened to "destroy" Kim was a lie.
Cuomo's standing with a majority of New Yorkers remained high in a Siena College Research Institute survey released earlier this month but conducted before the details of DeRosa's call were made public. More than 60% of voters approved of his handling of the pandemic although a majority gave him "fair" or "poor" marks on making public all data about Covid-related deaths of nursing home patients.
The questions about the Cuomo administration's handling of the data are not fading, as yet another contentious hearing with New York state Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker showed last week.
State Sen. Gustavo Rivera, the Democratic chair of the health committee, expressed frustration during the hearing with an administration that he said "will apparently never acknowledge that you have done anything wrong."
At the height of his popularity last spring, Cuomo was praised for his clarity and his candor about the depths of the crisis that his state was facing. That clarity has been missing in his administration's explanations of the handling of Covid-19 data, which have been confusing and difficult to follow. He now also faces serious allegations that he created a toxic work culture and acted in a way that indelibly changed the career trajectory of two young women in his employ.
Whether he has a political future won't be clear until he explains how that happened and offers his constituents a candid assessment of his own conduct -- which will determine whether he can regain their trust.

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Police: Same suspect stealing luggage from DIA baggage claim carousel - KKTV

DENVER (KKTV) - Police say the same man is targeting luggage at the Denver International Airport.

Four times in the last three months, passengers have reported their bags missing following their flights into DIA. The thefts were reported on Dec. 2, 3, 23, and then after a couple-month break, again on Feb. 15.

According to law enforcement, the baggage bandit would lurk around the carousel, pick off a suitcase and walk off. A wanted poster released by Denver Police Department Thursday shows surveillance photos of the suspect in action:

A DIA spokesperson told 11 News sister station CBS Denver that the airport does have security patrolling the terminal and baggage claims areas but encourage passengers carry their most precious items regardless.

“We encourage folks to carry on valuable items,” DIA’s Emily Williams said, “and to head to baggage claim as soon as possible once their flight arrives at the gate.”

Copyright 2021 KKTV. All rights reserved.

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Five questions that will define the 2021 MLS season | J. Sam Jones - MLSsoccer.com

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Greg Vanney - LA Galaxy - announcement - holding scarf
Courtesy of the LA Galaxy

Matt Doyle has been doing a series of excellent columns asking a big question for each team in the Eastern and Western Conference. Which made me think it’d be an easy way to steal content if I made it even broader and less nuanced.

This is basically The Mothership consuming itself. You shouldn’t fight it, you should just watch and see whether or not we make it out alive on the other side. All that being said for no reason, let’s zoom out a bit and take a look at five big questions that will (probably) define the MLS season. 

Who won the coaching carousel?

I’m realizing as I’m going through the big questions about this season that we’ve already at least hinted at them at The Daily Kickoff. But how could you not be fascinated by the new head coaches at some of the league’s most prestigious clubs. 

Gabriel Heinze comes to Atlanta with a ton of hype, Greg Vanney comes to LA with hype and understanding he’s in it for the long haul, Chris Armas is looking to prove a point in Toronto, Hernan Losada is hot and taking over a D.C. United team that hasn’t had a new manager in a decade, Gerhard Struber is in New York and seems to be a perfect fit in the Red Bulls’ system, but will he have the players? Oh, yeah, and then there’s Phil Neville in Miami

And now there's a new coaching search with Thierry Henry stepping down at CF Montréal.

It’s probably been the most fascinating offseason for managers in … MLS history? Now we get to sit back and see who wins in year one and make rash judgments about their abilities to lead their team after just one season. It’s going to be awesome.

Did everyone just kind of decide to wait until summer? 

It’s been picking up some as of late, but it’s been an notably quiet offseason overall. Especially considering how many teams need high-impact players or even players to just fill huge spots on their roster. But “unprecedented times” are gonna “unprecedented times”. 

So it may just be that teams have understood not only will they have to wait until summer or later for full stadiums, but that even in a normal year you can often get away with waiting until summer to assess your needs and still be successful. Why not wait, find out what the situation is like when it comes to your finances, find out what your team actually needs after a few months together and act accordingly? No one remembers the choir in Sister Act II: Back in the Habit before Lauryn Hill arrived, but they sure remember what happened when she did. 

Perhaps it’s patience. Or maybe it’s finances and the state of the global transfer market. Or maybe I’m just seeing things and the offseason is about to go insane as we get closer to the beginning of the season.

Which team accidentally had too many good players? 

Bad year to have too many good players. 

The international calendar is stacked in 2021. Players will be leaving for the Olympics, FIFA World Cup qualifying, Concacaf Nations League Finals, the Concacaf Gold Cup, Copa América and the European Championship. If you made the critical mistake of having too many good players, it could be a long summer for you. 

Like I just said a few paragraphs ago, though, you don’t have to be at your peak the whole year. But you most certainly have to be there at the end of the year. Will there be a team that loses too many players and too many games to recover by the end of the year to make the playoffs? 

Do the injured folks still look injured? 

Carlos Vela, Josef Martinez, Ike Opara and Sebastian Blanco are all returning for what will hopefully be their first full season since 2019. They will all play a massive part for four of the league’s best and highest-profile teams. If they’re back to their old ways, then those four teams will be among the best in the league. If they are just OK, those teams will likely just be good and not great. And if they don’t look like themselves at all, we could see each of their teams seriously underperform like LAFC and Atlanta did last season. 

Will the kids do the thing again? 

Pretty simple for how complex it actually is. But we’re going to see if the collection of young MLS players headed to Europe for big money can be repeated this year. It’s beginning to seem like every couple of months, a new young player pops up who takes the league, and then the world market, by storm. Will the momentum from the last couple of years continue?

No matter what, Philadelphia will play a bunch of homegrowns, Dallas will send another player to Bayern Munich and a Red Bulls player with a name that sounds like someone made up an alias on the spot will draw interest after they do something to beat Atlanta United. And as much as that last one will hurt me personally, it’s nice that with all these questions we can still have constants. 

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Fauci Worried That U.S. Virus Cases Will Stick at 70,000 a Day - Bloomberg

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Fauci Worried That U.S. Virus Cases Will Stick at 70,000 a Day  Bloomberg

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Homes That Sold for Around $600,000 - The New York Times

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Recent residential sales in New York City and the region.

Each week, our survey of recent residential sales in New York City and the surrounding region focuses on homes that sold around a certain price point, allowing you to compare single-family homes, condos and co-ops in different locales.

The “list price” is the asking price when the property came on the market with the most recent broker. The time on the market is measured from the most recent listing to the closing date of the sale.

Westchester | 5 bedrooms, 3 baths

A 62-year-old, 2,656-square-foot, gut-renovated ranch-style house, with an open floor plan, a living room with a stone fireplace, a kitchen with island seating and a deck, on 1.06 acres.

28 weeks on the market

$629,900 list price

3% above list price

Costs $13,366 a year in taxes

Listing broker Compass


Connecticut | 4 bedrooms, 3 baths

This 84-year-old, 3,900-square-foot, Cape Cod-style house has a living room with a fireplace, a family room with a bay window and fireplace and a kitchen with a checkerboard-tile floor on an acre.

17 weeks on the market

$649,000 list price

4% below list price

Costs $13,807 a year in taxes

Listing broker Compass


Long Island | 3 bedrooms, 1½ baths

This 91-year-old, 1,346-square-foot, colonial-style house has a living room with a painted-brick fireplace, a kitchen with stainless-steel appliances and a family room with sliders to a deck on 0.17 acres.

20 weeks on the market

$639,000 list price

2% below list price

Costs $10,396 a year in taxes

Listing broker Daniel Gale Sotheby’s International Realty


Manhattan | Studio

This 625-square-foot postwar co-op has a sleeping alcove, a bath, a kitchen with a breakfast bar and quartzite counters, and a home office in a doorman building with a roof deck.

19 weeks on the market

$550,000 list price

0% above list price

Costs $867 a month in maintenance; $41 a month in special assessments

Listing broker Warburg Realty


New Jersey | 4 bedrooms, 3½ baths

A 114-year-old, 2,260-square-foot, renovated house, with an open kitchen that has granite counters, a primary suite with two walk-in closets, a deck and an aboveground pool, on 0.3 acres.

9 weeks on the market

$669,900 list price

0% above list price

Costs $17,552 a year in taxes

Listing broker Weichert, Realtors


Queens | 2 bedrooms, 1 bath

A 1,100-square-foot prewar co-op, with hardwood floors, a sunken living room, an eat-in kitchen with quartz counters, and a primary bedroom with a bay window in a non-doorman elevator building.

19 weeks on the market

$619,000 list price

1% below list price

Costs $976 a month in maintenance

Listing broker Brown Harris Stevens

For weekly email updates on residential real estate news, sign up here. Follow us on Twitter: @nytrealestate.

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Fantasy Baseball Rankings 2021: Sleepers from top-rated model that called Will Smith's strong season - CBS Sports

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Finding players who can outperform their 2021 Fantasy baseball ADP can help ensure you have the depth necessary to survive the season. As owners everywhere begin their 2021 Fantasy baseball draft prep, identifying potential 2021 Fantasy baseball sleepers is a top priority. Last season, Angels first baseman Jared Walsh wound up being a pleasant surprise for anyone who claimed him off waivers.

Walsh hit nine homers and drove in 26 runs while slashing .293/.324/.646 over 32 games. Now, he'll enter the 2021 season as the team's starting first baseman. Considering that Walsh had a .256 BABIP, there's at least some reason to believe that Walsh can build on those incredible numbers, but where does he belong in your 2021 Fantasy baseball rankings? Before you go on the clock, check out the 2021 Fantasy baseball cheat sheets and rankings from the proven computer model at SportsLine.

Last season, SportsLine's Projection Model identified several top Fantasy baseball sleepers, including Dodgers catcher Will Smith. The 25-year-old was No. 6 catcher in Fantasy baseball last year, outperforming Yasmani Grandal, Mitch Garver and Gary Sanches, who were all drafted well ahead of him on average. Smith wound up hitting eight home runs with 25 RBIs and posting a .980 OPS that was over 70 points better than in his breakout season in 2019.

The team at SportsLine was all over Smith as a Fantasy sleeper from the start. Their model had him listed much higher than expert consensus rankings, and anyone who listened to their advice was well positioned for a league title. 

Their model is powered by the same people who powered projections for all three major Fantasy sites. And that same group is sharing its 2021 Fantasy baseball rankings and cheat sheets over at SportsLine, helping you find Fantasy baseball sleepers, breakouts and busts long before your competition. Their cheat sheets, available for leagues on many major sites, are updated multiple times every day. Any time an injury occurs or there's a change on a depth chart, the team at SportsLine updates its Fantasy baseball cheat sheets.

In fact, when it came to ranking players in Fantasy football, SportsLine's Projection Model beat human experts last season when there were big differences in ranking. And the model was the closest to the hole overall, meaning it best pinpointed where every player would finish each week. That could literally be the difference between winning your league or going home empty-handed.

Now, the model has simulated the entire 2021 MLB schedule 10,000 times and revealed its top 2021 Fantasy baseball sleepers, breakouts, and busts. You can get its Fantasy baseball cheat sheets 2021 here.

Top 2021 Fantasy baseball sleepers

One of the 2021 Fantasy baseball sleepers the model is all over: Cubs center fielder Ian Happ. The former consensus top-100 prospect has had to battle for opportunities in a star-studded Cubs lineup over the last four years, but he has delivered consistently at the plate with a career .825 OPS and finally appears to be the everyday starter in center field.

Happ slashed.253/.361/.505 with 12 home runs and 28 RBIs in 2020. He also posted a career-high 91.1 mph average exit velocity and a career-high 48.5 percent hard-hit contact rate. The switch-hitter hit 11 of his 12 home runs from the left side of the plate against right-handed pitching and should be near the top of a talented Cubs lineup. That's why the model ranks him ahead of center fielders like Trent Grisham and Luis Robert, who are being drafted 13 rounds earlier on average.

Another sleeper that SportsLine's Fantasy baseball rankings 2021 are extremely high on: Astros outfielder/DH Michael Brantley. He turned in a strong performance during the shortened 2020 season with an .840 OPS to earn a two-year, $32 million contract to stay with the Astros.

Still, Brantley has been the eighth designated hitter off the board in standard CBS Sports Fantasy baseball leagues, even though the model ranks him as its fourth-best option at the position. It puts him ahead of players like Shohei Ohtani, Jorge Soler and J.D. Martinez, who are all being drafted close to six rounds earlier, according to the latest 2021 Fantasy baseball ADP.

How to find proven 2021 Fantasy baseball rankings

SportsLine is also high on a first baseman with a Fantasy baseball ADP 2021 barely inside the top 10 who finishes ahead of studs like defending AL MVP Jose Abreu and Yankees first baseman Luke Voit. This pick could be the difference in winning your league or going home with nothing. You can see who it is here.

So which 2021 Fantasy baseball sleepers should you snatch in your draft? And which undervalued first baseman can help you win a championship? Visit SportsLine now to get Fantasy baseball rankings for every single position, all from the model that called Will Smith's huge breakout last season, and find out.

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Hand luggage-only fare: Up to 15% cheaper for flyers, airlines benefit too - Business Standard

Aviation regulator DGCA on Friday allowed airlines to unbundle services including check-in baggage, meaning airlines can charge extra for them

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airlines | flights | civil aviation sector

Indian airlines are devising new fare structures where travelling without check-in baggage may turn out to be 10-15 per cent cheaper. Last week, aviation regulator DGCA allowed airlines to unbundle services including check-in baggage, meaning airlines can charge for them extra.

Currently, it is compulsory for airlines to provide at least 15 kg of luggage. Unbundling, or dividing the product or service into separate elements and selling them each at a different price, is a profit maximisation strategy mainly aimed at segmenting the market and attracting the price-sensitive ...

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First Published: Sun, February 28 2021. 19:13 IST

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Lee Cataluna: The One Mistake That is Never Forgotten - Honolulu Civil Beat

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There are some amazing perks that come with being an elected official in Hawaii:

Being presented with orchid lei at every event you deign to attend.

Special reserved parking in front of the elementary school when you show up to speak at career day.

The thrill of seeing your face flapping on a vinyl banner tied to somebody’s fence in Kalihi.

The honor of turning over dirt with a gold-painted shovel at wastewater improvement projects.

Oh the glamour. Oh the royal treatment.

There’s a downside, of course. There’s often a steep cliff at such dizzying heights.

Getting arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence will dump a politician right off that precipice.

One of the hard truths that maybe no one ever tells wannabe candidates at politician training school is what always happens should they ever be arrested for drunken driving. More likely, they know darn well the cost of such reckless behavior, but fall into the “that’ll never happen to me” trap while they order drinks with dinner, go out with the gang to hoist a few after work, or take shots of cough syrup with a beer chaser.

A DUI arrest may be politically survivable, but it is indelible. No other brush with scandal taints a political career in Hawaii the same way. With or without a conviction, it is never forgotten.

One reason for that is that every time a politician is arrested for impaired driving, it triggers everyone in town to call to mind all the other lawmakers who have been arrested in the past. Reciting that list is like going through the 12 Days of Christmas. Nobody can just do the “10 Lords a Leaping” and leave it at that.

Moped rider among vehicular traffic along the morning commute on Beretania Street near the Punchbowl street intersection. 3 march 2015 photograph Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Beretania Street is one of the busiest in Honolulu. If you live on Oahu, you know the traffic only goes one way.

Cory Lum/Civil Beat

Impossible. You have to sing through all the others, too. And boy must Jon Riki Karamatsu, Ron Menor, Jon Yoshimura and the rest of the DUI club hate being reminded of the one time (OK, twice for Jon and Jon Riki) they torpedoed their own hopes for higher office.

There’s always lively debate about whose case was the most shameful. Is leaving the scene worse than having your kids in the car? Is admitting to driving without one contact lens a good excuse? So many ways to parse this out.

Contrast that with legendary Hawaii Board of Education member Chuck Norwood, who served from 1984 to 1993. Norwood served time in prison for murder after he was convicted of shooting a man in a Kona bar. He did his time, changed his life, got a bunch of college degrees and was elected to the school board over and over again. He’d go to site visits at elementary schools and teachers and students were excited to meet him and shake his hand.

So now we have state Rep. Sharon Har and her beer-with-cold-medicine excuse for driving the wrong way on Beretania Street, which is a stunning blunder in and of itself regardless of the substances that may have contributed to it.

If you live on Oahu, you know which way Beretania goes and all the landmarks along the way. You could be asleep in the back seat of a car going the wrong way and you would know just by the feel of the road. It’s that familiar.

Her limp excuse and tearful apology do nothing to tamp down the question of her judgment. Those folks in the legislature sit there and talk about Hawaii residents like we can’t handle our business without their benevolence and paternalism.

Rep Sharon Har speaks in opposition to the decrim marijuana bill.

Rep. Sharon Har speaks during the 2019 legislative session.

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House Speaker Scott Saiki calling Har’s arrest an “unfortunate incident” is so off. “Unfortunate” is when something bad beyond one’s control happens. This was not beyond her control. She didn’t get unlucky. She made bad choices.

All the other stuff — the orchid leis, the coned-off parking, the glossy campaign photographs — elevates politicians above the average folks who have to stand in the back of community meetings when all the seats are taken, park on a side street when all the stalls are full during school events, and never get envelopes of comp tickets to concerts or fancy dinners.

A DUI arrest is low, lower than the average Joe, lower than the usual kinds of mistakes most people make. People who have a lot to lose plan contingencies. They call an Uber. They phone a friend. They do their drinking at home. It is a big error in judgment that most people try hard to avoid to protect their own lives and reputation.

Is there room for redemption? Sure. Chuck Norwood is still the shining example. But it shouldn’t be because time passed and people forgot, because people won’t forget. Redemption comes when the person’s work on behalf of the public is so effective and selfless that the shameful moment pales in comparison. It is earned.

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Why Republicans Are Moving To Fix Elections That Weren't Broken - NPR

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People wait in line on the first day of early voting for the general election on Oct. 12, 2020 in Atlanta. Jessica McGowan/Getty Images

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Republican-led legislatures in dozens of states are moving to change election laws in ways that could make it harder to vote.

Many proposals explicitly respond to the 2020 election: Lawmakers cite public concerns about election security — concerns generated by disinformation that former President Donald Trump spread while trying to overturn the election.

The Brennan Center, a nonprofit that tracks voting laws, says that 43 states — including key swing states — are considering 253 bills that would raise barriers to voting, for example by reducing early voting days or limiting access to voting by mail. Lawmakers in a different set of 43 states have also proposed expanding voter access, but Republicans have made a priority of new security requirements and shorter voting periods.

In Georgia, which President Biden won by nearly 12,000 votes, legislators are considering multiple bills to restrict voting. The most significant, House Bill 531, is before a committee chaired by Republican Rep. Barry Fleming. He said Democrat Stacey Abrams campaigned to expand voter access after losing a governor's race in 2018, and now Republicans want their own changes. The bill is "an attempt to restore the confidence of our public," he said, because "there has been controversy regarding our election system."

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That controversy had no basis in fact. Audits and recounts confirmed the accuracy of the vote count in Georgia, and lawsuits there and in other states by the Trump campaign and allies failed to show otherwise. But Trump sought to discredit the vote, and even asked Georgia's secretary of state to change the vote totals. Now Georgia lawmakers are moving to repair a system that was not shown to be broken.

The latest amended version of HB 531 instructs Georgia counties to hold no more than 17 days of early voting. Populous counties held more days than that in 2020.

Republicans say they want to make voting rules "uniform" across the state's 159 counties.

"There are some counties that have as many voters as maybe a small neighborhood and Atlanta," reports Stephen Fowler, who covers elections for Georgia Public Broadcasting. "And this would treat all of them the same, which would tend to make it harder for the bigger, more urban, more Democratic metro counties to account for everyone and get them through the early voting process — especially if vote by mail is restricted by some other measures in the legislature."

The bill also puts new limits on weekend early voting, which would complicate efforts to allow voting on a Sunday just before the election. "Sunday voting," says Fowler, "is when Black churches in Georgia typically host a 'Souls to the Polls' event and where we statistically see the highest Black turnout during early voting."

Another bill, SB 67, would strengthen ID requirements to request an absentee ballot. The sponsor, state Sen. Larry Walker, argues that 97 percent of voters have the necessary identification; he told NPR it's a basic reform as mail voting expands. But Democratic Sen. David Lucas said some voters would be disenfranchised, and in a tearful speech on the Senate floor he told his Republican colleagues: "Every one of these election bills is [because] the election didn't turn out the way you wanted, and you want to perpetuate the lie that Trump told."

A promised follow-up to 2020

Even as Trump was attempting to overturn the election last year, his allies said they would use his false claims to shape future elections. "Mail-in balloting is a nightmare for us," Sen. Lindsey Graham told Fox News on Nov. 8, referring to a form of voting that had been used securely with little controversy for years, but was used more often by Democrats in 2020. Graham said that without changes, "we're never going to win again presidentially."

Appearing again on Fox News on Nov. 9, Graham said Senate Republicans would conduct "oversight" of mail-in balloting, because "if we don't do something about voting by mail, we're going to lose the ability to elect a Republican in this country."

Republicans lost control of the Senate in January, curtailing Graham's ability to follow up. But the party remains in control of most state legislatures, which make most election laws.

Myrna Pérez of the Brennan Center describes "a very discernible and disturbing pattern" to reduce mail-in balloting — for example, by adding requirements to request a ballot or changing the rules for drop boxes. She described the bills as "attacks on methods of participation that had been used by older, white voters for a very, very long time."

The line to vote outside the Macon-Bibb County Board of Elections stretched around the building and lasted an hour and a half on the first day of early voting in October 2020. Grant Blankenship/GPB

Grant Blankenship/GPB

Mail-in balloting is only questioned now, Pérez said, because non-white voters have taken advantage of it. "There was very little attempt to hide the racialized nature" of the attacks on mail balloting in 2020, she said, noting that Trump allies constantly claimed corruption in big diverse cities such as Philadelphia, Atlanta and Detroit.

A divide among Republicans

Georgia Republican Rep. Buddy Carter is among those who questioned the 2020 election results. He supported a lawsuit to overturn the results in six states. The Supreme Court dismissed the suit, but not before Carter recorded a fundraising video promoting it, urging supporters to "chip in to assure that we get fair and free elections."

Today, Carter acknowledges reality, telling NPR: "President Biden was the victor in the state of Georgia," and "I don't believe that there was voter fraud." Yet he still voices concern about how Georgia applied its election laws.

"Absentee voting needs to be cleaned up. It needs to be tightened up," he said. "What other state is there, aside from Georgia, where if you vote in person you have to have a photo ID, but if you vote absentee, all you have to have is a matching signature? That's not right."

Rep. Carter's claim is not entirely true. Of the six states that strictly require a photo ID to cast a vote in person, only two — Wisconsin and Kansas — mandate a photo ID for absentee ballots. Tennessee and Indiana will let you submit other documents, such as a copy of a utility bill, to establish residency. Mississippi requires a witness, such as a notary public.

Georgia Deputy Secretary of State Jordan Fuchs, a Republican, concedes that many voters distrust the system. "I have a Facebook feed of individuals who don't trust the voting machines," she said. But she said it is only because many believed Trump's lies.

"We need to move into a narrative where you're not attacking election administrators for your loss," she said.

Voters queue outside of Philadelphia City Hall to cast their early voting ballots on Oct. 27, 2020. Mark Makela/Getty Images

Mark Makela/Getty Images

Fuchs said Georgia's repeated audits and recounts found two absentee ballots cast by dead people, out of 1.3 million absentee ballots and a total of about 5 million votes cast in Georgia. The secretary of state's office is prepared to back reforms, she says, but only if they make sense.

On Republicans and democracy

Some conservatives fear that attacking elections is the point of these proposed voting law changes.

"Rather than celebrate the massive voter turnout that we saw, they want to dial that back," said Charlie Sykes, a writer and conservative talk show host. He left the Republican party, and was ostracized, after he criticized Trump.

Sykes said his former Republican allies "see the country slipping away from them" through demographic change. He sees some of them embracing alternatives to democracy, including "anti-democratic authoritarianism."

We put Sykes' concern to Buddy Carter, the Republican Georgia congressman who supports changes to voting laws. Are Republicans giving up on democracy?

"I'm the eternal optimist," he replied, but "I do know that there are a number of Republicans who are very concerned." He described a meeting with one of his strongest supporters, who "was very concerned about the future of our party" and also about "the future of our country. And that's why what the Georgia state legislature is doing right now is extremely, extremely important."

Republicans maintain they're pushing to change voting laws at the urging of Republican voters. Those voters are following the lead of the ex-president, who remains a dominant figure in the party despite trying for months to overturn a democratic election.

Bo Hamby and Scott Saloway produced and edited the audio story. Stephen Fowler contributed reporting.

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7 hidden Gmail features that might even help get you to inbox zero - CNET

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These lesser-known tips can save you from irritation and emails that fall through the cracks.

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If you use Gmail daily on a computer for work or personal use -- or both at the same time as I do -- are you making the most of Google's email client? Gmail has a host of features that can help you better manage the constant flow of messages to and from your Gmail inbox. 

I lay out my top seven tips to set you on the path to becoming a Gmail pro. If you already use them all, congratulations. If not, try incorporating at least one or two into your routine, if not the whole bundle. You'll thank yourself in the long run.

1. Mute annoyingly noisy email threads

Getting stuck on a group email thread can be as annoying on a laptop as a group text on your phone. You've got enough distractions during the workday, especially if you're working from home, that you certainly don't need to see a group email continually calling out to you at the top of your inbox as new replies arrive. 

If you have an active group email and no longer care to follow the back-and-forth chatter, you can opt out. Open the thread, click the triple-dot button at the top and click Mute. The conversation will be moved to your archive, where it will remain even when more replies arrive. 

If you later get curious about what you missed, you can always find it in the All Mail view of Gmail, which includes your archived messages. You can then unmute the conversation if you so choose by opening the conversation and clicking the X button next to the Mute label at the top of the page. Once unmuted, the next time you receive a reply, it will show up at the top of your inbox.

gmail-mute
Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNET

2. Snooze so you don't forget

Just like the snooze button on your alarm that you employ when you aren't ready to get out of bed, Gmail has a snooze button for messages you aren't ready to respond to but don't want to lose track of in your inbox. Hover over a message in your inbox and click the little clock button on the right and pick a later time and date -- later today, tomorrow, next week or a specific time you set -- for it to appear back at the top of your inbox.

3. Reading pane for an Outlook-like look

If you've got a big display, I encourage you to make use of your luxurious screen real estate and use Gmail's reading pane. It makes Gmail look and feel more like Outlook, where you can view and respond to messages without leaving the inbox. Click the gear icon in the upper-right corner to open the Quick Settings panel, scroll down to Reading pane and select Right of inbox or Below inbox to split your view horizontally or vertically.

gmail-reading-pane
Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNET

4. Choose your tabs

Gmail does an admirable job of filtering your inbox so the messages you care about go to your inbox while the rest get relegated to the Social or Promotional tabs. Click the gear icon and then click See all settings. On the Settings page, select Inbox and in the Categories section at the top, you can choose which tabs you want at the top of your inbox. Or if you simply ignore all tabs other than your Primary inbox, then you can uncheck all but Primary for a streamlined, tab-less Gmail experience. To save, scroll down and hit the Save Changes button.

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5. Enable auto-advance and thank me later

I spend a large chunk at the beginning and end of each workday deleting unwanted emails. I prefer to open each email before deleting it so I can take at least a quick glance at it before discarding it. By default, Gmail sends you back to your inbox instead of the next message when you delete an opened message, which requires more clicks and time to clean out your inbox. You can change this behavior in settings, however, so you advance to the previous or next message after you delete an opened message. 

In settings, click Advanced and you'll see Auto-advance at the top. Click the radio dial on the right for Enable to turn on. And if you head back to Settings > General and scroll down to Auto-advance, you can choose to go to the next (newer) or previous (older) conversation. To save, scroll down and hit the Save Changes button.

gmail-auto-advance-setting
Screenshot by Matt Elliott/CNET

6. Email large attachments via Google Drive

There's a little Drive icon at the bottom of Gmail's compose window. It lets you attach files you have stored in Drive or simply send a link. For Google Drive formats -- Docs, Sheets, Slides and so on -- your only option is to send a link to the file. For other file types -- PDFs, Word docs, images -- you have the option of sending them as an attachment or a Drive link, which lets you share files larger than Gmail's 25MB size limit for attachments.

7. Hiding in plain sight: Advanced search

With Google behind Gmail, it's no surprise that Gmail offers powerful search tools. You've likely used the search bar above your inbox to dig up an old email based on a keyword or sender, but it can do so much more. Click the little down-arrow button on the right of the search bar to open Gmail's advanced search panel where you can search for date ranges and attachment sizes, by subject line and with other filters.

Need more Gmail help? Here are 15 Gmail shortcuts you should know and six Gmail tricks to minimize regret, frustration and spam. To stay safe, this is how you can secure your Gmail account in four easy steps.

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