EL SEGUNDO — The first alert on his phone came around 1:30 a.m., just a few hours after LeBron James and the Lakers had finished wrapping up a 120-101 win over Charlotte.

The second came about 15 minutes later, and 15 minutes after that, the James family had shaken off their sleep enough to pack up and take flight from their Brentwood home, joining an estimated 20,000 Los Angeles residents who had to evacuate the potential path of the destructive Getty wildfire.

Because it doesn’t matter if you’re a prince, a pauper or a four-time NBA MVP – when a fire threatens, you have to run.

“I was talking to my wife about it a little bit and I said I hadn’t been in a fire drill since like the seventh grade,” James said Tuesday, a day-and-a-half after being evacuated from his neighborhood. “It’s just challenging at that hour, getting my family, getting my kids, getting everybody and having to evacuate at such a rapid rate. You don’t really have much time to think about what you can get or what you can do.”

Many Angelenos are sleeping in unfamiliar beds as fire crews fight the blaze that has already consumed more than 600 acres and at least eight homes. James, his wife and three children are among them – he told reporters that Monday morning, he left his home with his family, his credit card and passport. Driving around the city, he walked into four hotels as his family waited in the car before finally finding temporary lodgings at around 4 a.m.

James is a creature of routine, fastidious about his diet, training and perhaps most of all his sleep. He admitted the evacuation under the cover of darkness had been disruptive to all of those cycles that anchor his life – his children didn’t go to school Monday after not going to sleep until 6:30 a.m. – but now that his family is safely harbored, basketball has given him some refuge as well.

James showed up Monday morning to the practice facility for his morning workout and the team’s Genius Talk, despite just about two hours of sleep himself.

“It’s not hard once I know my family is safe,” he said. “My family is safe and a little discombobulated obviously because of the situation, but they’re safe and once they were safe, to be able to come back here is greatly appreciated.”

Coach Frank Vogel canceled practice Monday, but said the decision was not directly related to the evacuation of James, one of the team’s biggest stars. Vogel said he did offer James the chance to take the day off, but he declined.

Against Memphis on Tuesday night, James was expected to play, but Vogel acknowledged the team will likely use extra awareness and caution for his minutes.

“We’ll always be attentive when there’s an adverse circumstance like this,” Vogel said, “just to keep an eye on it, and probably overcommunicate with him on how he’s feeling.”

While his home is still standing, James said, it’s not yet in the clear, making it one of the estimated 7,100 homes still under threat of damage by the wildfire, which started early Monday morning.

James said the experience had given him a special appreciation for the first responders fighting the Getty fire.

“Those guys – men and women – are unbelievable, what they’re doing and their bravery throughout this time,” he said. “And anytime you’re dealing with such a situation like that, they’re the reason why things can be a lot less worse than they possibly could be. So, it’s an amazing job what they do and their commitment with what’s going on right now.”

James’ appreciation was not limited to words: The Lakers forward – famous for his love of “Taco Tuesday” – paid for the Mariscos Jalisco taco truck to stop by the emergency responders’ base camp where they were treated to free lunch on Tuesday.

Raul Ortega, the 56-year-old owner of Mariscos Jalisco taco truck, was happy to help.

“It’s a big compliment, and it will help our business,” Ortega said in a phone interview. “But I’d be glad to help even if I was not compensated. It’s a good cause to help people who are risking their lives to help others.”

He added that “LeBron is a good guy. He evacuated his house and he looked for ways to pay back.”

Ortega said he spent two hours on the UCLA campus on Tuesday afternoon, making hard-shell tacos and feeding about 200 firefighters.

INJURY UPDATES ON RONDO, KUZMA

After Tuesday’s shootaround, Kyle Kuzma and Rajon Rondo challenged assistant coaches Miles Simon and Mike Penberthy in a 3-point shooting contest that is a typical part of the fabric of Lakers practices. But while the duo seemed to be having a good time on the court after the morning workout, neither was scheduled to see the court Tuesday night against the Grizzlies.

Rondo had an MRI over the weekend that the medical staff used to diagnose a strained right calf. The veteran point guard is considered day-to-day, but he hasn’t played in any contests since the team returned from China.

Kuzma is still “ramping up” his workload from an August foot injury, but Vogel sounded optimistic Tuesday morning that the Lakers haven’t ruled out the possibility of the third-year forward returning to the lineup during the team’s upcoming three-game trip through Dallas, San Antonio and Chicago. Kuzma and Rondo are expected to travel with the team.

“We don’t have a game in mind,” Vogel said of Kuzma. “As soon as possible is my take on it. He did a little bit of shootaround stuff today. He’s gonna continue to ramp up his activity tomorrow, even though we’ll have an off day, and we’ll see where he’s at at that point.”

Staff writers Ryan Carter and Olga Grigoryants contributed to this story.

Source Article from https://www.ocregister.com/2019/10/29/lebron-james-details-getty-fire-evacuation-commends-first-responders/

BRENTWOOD, LOS ANGELES (KABC) — The Getty Fire was sparked when high winds carried a tree branch from outside of a brush clearance zone into a city power line, officials said Tuesday.

The eucalyptus branch hit the line, creating an electrical arc that sent sparks to the ground, investigators concluded. The power lines themselves continued to deliver electricity, but the sparks set out a fire that spread quickly amid the dangerous Santa Ana winds and dry brush.

“This was, simply put in plain parlance, an act of God,” Mayor Eric Garcetti said.

The power lines were located near the 1800 block of North Sepulveda Boulevard to the west of the 405 Freeway and the fire began around 1:30 a.m. Monday.

Garcetti and other officials said the city had done brush clearance in the area over the summer beyond what was legally required. The tree where the branch came from was about 25 feet away from the power line and 20 feet up the hill.

The investigation was aided by dashcam video from a car driving through the Sepulveda Pass that caught what appeared to be an electrical arc explosion along the side of the road. Officials also found the charred eucalyptus branch in the area.

In the meantime, the firefight continued Tuesday. While the flames were mostly under control, firefighters remained on guard to prevent the blaze from rekindling ahead of a major Santa Ana wind event expected Tuesday night.

Firefighters worked overnight to spray homes in the Brentwood area and other neighborhoods to stamp out any existing embers. Many homes in Brentwood were seen red-tagged, charred and unrecognizable.
Fire officials said it’s critical to get ahead of the coming Santa Ana wind event, which is expected to arrive in the Southland Tuesday night. Forecasters say this round of wind may be the strongest of the season so far.

At a Tuesday afternoon press conference, Mayor Eric Garcetti said the fire had increased slightly in size to 656 acres and was at 15% containment.

LAFD Chief Ralph Terrazas said crews are on alert ahead of the wind event.

“Our goal today will be to increase containment as much as possible. That is our primary objective,” he said. “Embers are known to travel for miles…We are very concerned about tonight’s wind event.”

MORE: Time-lapse video shows Getty Fire flames spreading over hills for hours

The Getty Fire erupted at 1:30 a.m. Monday along the 405 Freeway in the Sepulveda Pass, prompting the mandatory evacuation of thousands of residential and commercial structures. The blaze has destroyed 12 homes and damaged five.

MORE: See full list and map of evacuation area, road closures due to the Getty Fire

“We know we’re going to have a major wind event tonight at about 11 o’clock that’s going to last until Thursday. We’re doing everything we can to wrap our arms around this fire to be able to prevent a potential of those strong gusty Santa Ana winds, pushing this fire, rekindling a lot of the fire and blowing embers a mile to two miles down range,” said Assistant Chief Jaime Moore with Los Angeles Fire.

PHOTOS: Getty Fire burns in West Los Angeles

Gov. Gavin Newsom spoke at a press conference Tuesday. “FEMA has been extraordinary. Trump administration has been extraordinarily supportive and helpful. Every request we’ve made has been granted. That support has come in real time,” he said.

Garcetti announced he was signing an emergency declaration to bring more resources to help battle the blaze. During a press conference, Garcetti said the fire was not caused by an encampment or by someone without housing.

The mayor said investigators were making “good progress” in determining the cause. They were looking at multiple possibilities.

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Source Article from https://abc7.com/getty-fire-cause-wind-carried-tree-branch-into-power-line-officials-say/5656015/

Here’s what you need to know to understand the impeachment inquiry into President Trump.

How we got here: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced the beginning of an official impeachment inquiry against President Trump on Sept. 24, 2019. Here’s what has happened since then.

What’s happening now: Lawmakers are conducting an inquiry, which could lead to impeachment. An impeachment would mean the U.S. House thinks the president is no longer fit to serve and should be removed from office. Here’s a guide to how impeachment works.

What’s happening next: House committees conducting the investigation have scheduled hearings and subpoenaed documents from dozens of witnesses relating to the president’s July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. Here are key dates and what’s next.

Stay informed: Read the latest reporting and analysis on the impeachment inquiry here.

Get email updates: Get a guide to the latest on the inquiry in your inbox every weekday. Sign up for the 5-Minute Fix.

Listen: Follow The Post’s coverage with daily updates from across our podcasts.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/powerpost/democrats-unveil-procedures-for-trumps-impeachment-inquiry-rebutting-gop-attacks/2019/10/29/a08130b4-fa72-11e9-8190-6be4deb56e01_story.html

Outside of risks from the fire’s heat — and any health risks related to a long-term power outage — the main health concern in wildfire conditions is smoke, which produces particulate matter that can penetrate deep into the lungs, increasing the risk of respiratory diseases and asthma, as well as heart problems.

Anna Maria Barry-Jester/KHN


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Anna Maria Barry-Jester/KHN

Outside of risks from the fire’s heat — and any health risks related to a long-term power outage — the main health concern in wildfire conditions is smoke, which produces particulate matter that can penetrate deep into the lungs, increasing the risk of respiratory diseases and asthma, as well as heart problems.

Anna Maria Barry-Jester/KHN

Farm laborers in yellow safety vests walked through neatly arranged rows of grapes in a vineyard outside Healdsburg, Calif., Friday, harvesting the last of the deep purple bundles that hung from the vines, even as the sky behind them was dark with soot.

Over the hill just behind them, firetrucks and first responders raced back and forth from a California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection staging area, working to contain the Kincade Fire raging through the rugged hills and canyons in northeastern Sonoma County. As of Tuesday, more than 4,500 firefighters were battling the blaze, and a broad swath of the county was under evacuation orders as Northern California endured a powerful windstorm that was fueling the flames.

For farmworkers in Sonoma County’s fabled wine country, the Kincade Fire poses a daunting set of risks. October marks not only fire season in California, but also the peak of the grape harvest. In areas not imminently threatened, some workers labored through the heat and dangerous smoke to retrieve some of the hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of grapes that had yet to be harvested. As the fire continues to spread, many now are finding that their work — and paychecks — have been suspended.

As of Tuesday, more than 4,500 firefighters were battling the explosive Kincade Fire, and a broad swath of Sonoma County, from mountain to coast, was under evacuation orders.

Anna Maria Barry-Jester/KHN


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Anna Maria Barry-Jester/KHN

As of Tuesday, more than 4,500 firefighters were battling the explosive Kincade Fire, and a broad swath of Sonoma County, from mountain to coast, was under evacuation orders.

Anna Maria Barry-Jester/KHN

Sonoma County is familiar with fire. The Tubbs Fire tore through the area in 2017, killing 22 people and destroying more than 5,000 homes. Last year, dense smoke from Butte County’s Camp Fire — the deadliest in state history — hung in the valley for days.

As wildfires of this strength and intensity grow more frequent, so do concerns for field workers, who can face conditions that jeopardize their health, wages and housing.

Outside of the fire itself, the main health concern in wildfire conditions is smoke, which produces particulate matter, a mix of gases and microscopic pieces of solid matter. The particles can penetrate deep into the lungs, increasing the risk of respiratory diseases and asthma, as well as heart problems.

These risks lead health authorities to warn people in areas affected by wildfire to stay indoors and limit exertion. Farmworkers, an essential component of the wine country economy, along with construction workers, utility workers and many others who make their livelihood outside, can’t always take such precautions.

On Saturday, Manuel Ortiz Sanchez, 52, sat with his family outside Santa Rosa’s Veterans Hall, which overnight had been transformed into a shelter. He had been evacuated from his home in Healdsburg and was nervous about what it would mean for his family. Born in Mexico, he has worked in the region’s vineyards for more than 20 years. He already had lost a day and a half of work to the smoke. Would he be paid the next week if the vineyard where he works were still shut down? “It’s up to the boss,” he said.

October marks not only fire season in California but also the peak of the grape harvest. As wildfires grow more frequent, so do concerns for field workers, who, like other outdoor workers, face particular conditions that can jeopardize health.

Anna Maria Barry-Jester/KHN


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Anna Maria Barry-Jester/KHN

October marks not only fire season in California but also the peak of the grape harvest. As wildfires grow more frequent, so do concerns for field workers, who, like other outdoor workers, face particular conditions that can jeopardize health.

Anna Maria Barry-Jester/KHN

Inside the hall, volunteers with Corazón Healdsburg, a nonprofit that works with the local Latino community, was helping Spanish-speaking families register at the shelter. One woman wondered whether the registration bracelet would identify her as an immigrant and whether authorities would be coming to the shelter.

At another table, volunteers offered to take contact information for people who are undocumented, and therefore not eligible for most federal relief. After the 2017 fire, local organizations created a fund to help people who were undocumented and affected by the fires, and that fund is back up and running. Ninety percent of the more than 2,000 people the fund helped in 2017 did not lose homes, but they lost wages and the food in their fridge from electrical outages, said Mara Ventura, executive director of North Bay Jobs With Justice. Power outages have continued to be a an issue in the area this week, with the utility PG&E turning off electricity to millions in the region for days, because of strong winds and fire fears.

Advocates have been pushing for labor standards related to wildfires and smoke. Though a bill failed to pass the California legislature this year, the state adopted temporary emergency regulations in July. They require employers to check the air quality before and during a shift. When pollutants rise above a certain threshold, an air quality index of 150, workers are to be moved to a safer location if possible, and provided protective masks if not. The AQI in eastern Sonoma County has routinely topped 150 in recent days.

Even heavy-duty masks aren’t much of a solution for someone laboring outside, said Celeste Philip, the health officer for Sonoma County. When used correctly, they are uncomfortable and make it difficult to breathe, and it is hard to work in them for very long. The best way for workers to stay safe is to limit their outdoor exposure, she said.

In the days after the Kincade Fire erupted on Oct. 23, Sonoma County authorities allowed some grape growers and their workers onto vineyards within the evacuation zone to try and save their crops, said James Gore, a county supervisor. About 10% of the grapes in the county, mostly those used to produce cabernet, were still on the vine when the fire began. “Safety first, but then economy,” he said.

Corazón Healdsburg, a nonprofit that works with the local Latino community, is helping families affected by the Kincade Fire. “They’re sudden,” Leticia Romero, director of community engagement says of wildfires and their trauma. “You go to bed, and you wake up to this natural disaster.”

Anna Maria Barry-Jester/KHN


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Anna Maria Barry-Jester/KHN

Corazón Healdsburg, a nonprofit that works with the local Latino community, is helping families affected by the Kincade Fire. “They’re sudden,” Leticia Romero, director of community engagement says of wildfires and their trauma. “You go to bed, and you wake up to this natural disaster.”

Anna Maria Barry-Jester/KHN

Though there’s no particular oversight of the process, Gore said, the local Farm Bureau and other industry groups have made sure the growers are aware of the health risks and workers’ rights. Many people, including farmworkers who often aren’t paid for time off, want to work, he said. “People can work, but it must never be under duress.”

Still, he said, “if somebody wants perfect health, they need to leave our community, because we have smoke here.”

Concerns that farmworkers, many of whom speak primarily Spanish, weren’t getting health advisories and other warnings during the 2017 fires led to an overhaul of county communications, which this time are being provided in both Spanish and English. Gore, who speaks Spanish, said he’d been to the evacuation shelter to speak with more than 100 agriculture workers about those risks, and to let them know they are not obligated to work.

Fernando Gonzalez was at a shelter in Healdsburg on Friday before it, too, was evacuated. From Mexico, Gonzalez was five or six months into his stay in the U.S., working on a temporary visa for agricultural workers, when he was awakened in the night by colleagues who had noticed the fire. His employer shuttled him and 40 to 50 other employees to the evacuation center after deciding that the house they shared on the vineyard property wasn’t safe.

Gonzalez said he had a couple of weeks left on his contract, but they were being sent home to Mexico early. He said he was paid for the week of work, including two missed days, and was glad not to be laboring in the heavy smoke.

Many other farmworkers are local residents. Another family who arrived at the shelter on the first night of the fire had lost their trailer home and all their belongings to the fire, said Leticia Romero, director of community engagement at Corazón Healdsburg.

In a room that normally hosts classes — a bright mural spanning one wall — volunteers filled bins with clothing, hygiene supplies and other essentials for that family and others. Corazón also has launched a fund to provide emergency cash assistance.

“This is our second year of fires,” Romero said. “They’re sudden. You go to bed, and you wake up to this natural disaster.” In some ways, the lingering emotional trauma is the thing she worries about most for her community.

This KHN story first published on California Healthline, a service of the California Health Care Foundation.

Kaiser Health News is a nonprofit, editorially independent program of the Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation. KHN is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2019/10/29/774506880/smoke-and-power-outages-near-california-wildfires-hit-farmworkers-hard

Boeing’s CEO defended the aerospace company’s safety inspection system in Senate testimony Tuesday, despite two crashes that have grounded its 737 Max jetliner.

He also disclosed he was notified before the second crash of a test pilot’s signal of “egregious” problems with the Max’s flight control system, now believed to be at fault in the plane’s two crashes.

Overall, however, CEO Dennis Muilenburg took an apologetic stance before the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee. The hearing was attended by family members of the 346 people who lost their lives in the crashes. They stood at one point to show large photos of their deceased relatives. 

Not only will the 737 Max not fly again until all agree it is safe, Muilenburg said, but Boeing also is reviewing all its safety policies.

“On behalf of myself and the Boeing Company, we are deeply and truly sorry. As a husband and father myself, I am heartbroken by your losses. I think about you and your loved ones every day, and the entire Boeing team does as well,” he said.

But when pressed on specifics by senators, Muilenburg took a harder line.

Even though he knew about the 2016 electronic messages from the test pilot, he denied knowing until recently the specifics they contained. The pilot talked about unknowingly lying to regulators. The company turned the messages over to the Justice Department in February, but didn’t share it with the Federal Aviation Administration and the Senate committee until recently.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/10/29/boeing-737-max-ceo-dennis-muilenberg-testify-congress-testimony-crash/2495018001/

When U.S. Army Special Forces soldiers with the secretive Joint Special Operations Command flew into Syria’s northwestern Idlib province to capture or kill Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, a male Belgian Malinois was along for the ride in the historic military operation. His name is Conan, Newsweek has learned.

On Monday, President Donald Trump tweeted out a picture of the military dog assigned to 1st Special Forces Operational Detachment-Delta, known as Delta Force, a unit that falls under the secretive Joint Special Operations Command.

“We have declassified a picture of the wonderful dog (name not declassified) that did such a GREAT JOB in capturing and killing the Leader of ISIS, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi,” Trump tweeted from his official account.

Multiple Defense Department sources confirmed to Newsweek on Monday that the dog’s name is Conan. During a Sunday morning press conference to announce the death of Baghdadi, Trump said the dog was injured when the Islamic State leader detonated a suicide vest, killing himself and three children.

Trump declassified the photograph on Monday after a Pentagon press briefing between Defense Secretary Dr. Mark T. Esper and U.S. Army General Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

Milley told reporters at a Pentagon briefing Monday that the dog was “slightly wounded and fully recovering,” and said the Pentagon would not be disclosing the dog’s identity as the animal was instrumental in the top secret raid which resulted in the death of the Islamic State leader. The dog has since returned to duty.

Working dogs have been a part of military culture dating back to World War I. Dogs typically are ranked as noncommissioned officers, a higher rank than the dog’s handler, and are routinely involved in high-level, special operation missions or assigned to conventional forces to find improvised explosives devices.

During World War I, “Sergeant Stubby,” described by The New York Times at his death in April 1926 as “only a dog, and unpedigreed at that,” was the first dog in U.S. Army history to be granted military rank, according to U.S. Army historical records. He took part in four major offensives, the Times wrote, and Stubby’s first injury in combat was from gas exposure.

In his Sunday morning announcement of the raid on the Idlib compound, Trump said that Baghdadi “died like a dog,” whimpering and screaming.

At the same time, he described Conan—identified not by name but as a K-9 working with the team—as “a beautiful dog, a talented dog.”

Trump himself is not known to have any pets, including any dogs, and does not appear to be an animal-lover in general.

Newsweek’s senior Pentagon source said the dog was named for the comedian Conan O’Brien, and not the famed Barbarian.

10/29, 9:20 a.m.: This story has been updated to correct Conan’s gender.

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Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/classified-name-dog-wounded-syria-isis-baghdadi-raid-revealed-1468238

Inside Baghdadi raid – ISIS leader blew himself up in a tunnel with kids as US special forces blitzed his lair:
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/1022122…

Donald Trump reveals he kept Baghdadi raid plans secret from House Speaker Nancy Pelosi because he feared leaks:
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/1022711…

Trump shrugs off deafening boos and chants of ‘lock him up’ as he attends World Series game:
https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/1022667…

From Brexit breaking news to HD movie trailers, The Sun newspaper brings you the latest news videos and explainers from the UK and around the world.

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Source Article from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3Wu4e1IcP0

Here’s what you need to know to understand the impeachment inquiry into President Trump.

How we got here: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced the beginning of an official impeachment inquiry against President Trump on Sept. 24, 2019. Here’s what has happened since then.

What’s happening now: Lawmakers are conducting an inquiry, which could lead to impeachment. An impeachment would mean the U.S. House thinks the president is no longer fit to serve and should be removed from office. Here’s a guide to how impeachment works.

What’s happening next: House committees conducting the investigation have scheduled hearings and subpoenaed documents from dozens of witnesses relating to the president’s July 25 phone call with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. Here are key dates and what’s next.

Stay informed: Read the latest reporting and analysis on the impeachment inquiry here.

Get email updates: Get a guide to the latest on the inquiry in your inbox every weekday. Sign up for the 5-Minute Fix.

Listen: Follow The Post’s coverage with daily updates from across our podcasts.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/vindman-offers-a-firsthand-account-of-critical-episodes-in-alleged-quid-pro-quo/2019/10/29/cb16a5c0-fa45-11e9-ac8c-8eced29ca6ef_story.html

California accuses PG&E of mishandling power outages amid wildfires

People in Northern California’s wine country were warned Tuesday they may need to leave “at a moment’s notice” as powerful winds threaten to bring more devastation to areas already ravaged by wildfires. Crews battling the massive Kincade Fire fear the wind could fan the flames.

“The danger has not passed yet,” Sonoma County Sheriff Mark Essick told reporters. “… Nothing is imminent right now, but I think anybody who lives in Sonoma County right now should be considering what they would do if a warning came or an evacuation order came, so I would encourage everyone to be prepared to go at a moment’s notice if things change.”

The wildfire has burned an area more than twice the size of San Francisco and destroyed nearly 60 homes. Six days after the fire first ignited, firefighters were scrambling to put out hot spots in hopes of getting an upper hand before wind gusts reaching as high as 50 mph kick up again, CBS News correspondent Jonathan Vigliotti reports.

“The wind will carry burning materials sometimes miles ahead of the fire,” Cal Fire spokesman Rhett Pratt said, “so we’re having to go around and one by one deal with those and mitigate those dangers as they pop up, which is always a difficulty, it being dynamic and not just a set fire line.”

In Southern California, where high winds fueled the Getty Fire in the early morning hours Monday, authorities are manning their fire lines with additional personnel. Their concern is predicted gusts of up to 80 mph.

“I’ve asked my command staff to do everything possible to ensure that the line is as cold as possible before those winds kick up,” Los Angeles Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas said. With the wind expected to pick up in Northern California, California’s largest utility, Pacific Gas & Electric, warned it could conduct its third power cut in less than a week; nearly 4 million people could be in the dark.

A firefighter pulls a hose along Chalk Hill Road as he battles the wind-driven Kincade Fire in Windsor, California, October 27, 2019.

Reuters/Stephen Lam


Follow below for live updates

Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/live-news/fire-in-california-latest-getty-kincade-sonoma-tick-fires-evacuations-today-live-updates-2019-10-29/

Khanna said that cutting power should not have to be the solution, stressing the company should have been and should still be updating its electrical systems. He estimated it would likely cost billions of dollars.

“In the 21st century, when you have a state that has Apple, Google and Tesla in it, there is no excuse that we can’t get power to our people on a regular basis,” the California Democrat said on “Squawk Box.”

PG&E has said that customers can now expect rolling power outages for another 10 years as it upgrades its electrical systems in response to more extreme weather conditions in California.

“This has been a decades of neglect process that has led to this crisis,” Khanna said. “There has been systematic neglect in the infrastructure and the forest management.”

“I think the key is that the state needs to run this,” he added. “It’s not enough to have just regulators.”

PG&E was not available to immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment. But in the past, the utility has defended the outages, saying they were integral for the public’s safety.

“We would only take this decision … to help reduce catastrophic wildfire risk to our customers and communities,” Michael Lewis, senior vice president of electric operations at PG&E, told CNBC over the weekend.

“There is no compromising the safety of our customers, which is our most important responsibility,” he concluded.

— CNBC’s Emma Newburger and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/29/california-rep-ro-khanna-the-state-should-take-control-of-pacific-gas-and-electric.html

**Election nerd alert**

Chris Hanretty, a professor of politics at Royal Holloway, University of London, has looked into the issue of the student vote in a series of tweets.

Based on assumptions about the number of students in the UK and their voting habits, he says that if 10% of students who would normally vote decide to skip the election because of vacation, there would be between 144,200 and 188,500 fewer votes in total.

He goes on to explore the nitty gritty details of what that would mean for different parties (hint: Labour and Lib Dems would lose the most).

Read the whole thread here:

Source Article from https://edition.cnn.com/uk/live-news/brexit-boris-johnson-election-tuesday-dle-gbr-intl/index.html

Just after a Boeing Co. 737 MAX jet crashed in Indonesia a year ago, FAA officials asked themselves: Should they warn the world the entire fleet could have a design flaw?

A Federal Aviation Administration analysis showed a good chance the same malfunction would crop up again, according to agency officials and people briefed on the results. Even under the most optimistic scenario, the agency’s statistical models projected a high likelihood of a similar emergency within roughly a year.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/why-is-this-airplane-still-flying-the-faa-missteps-that-kept-boeings-max-aloft-11572308196

Iraqi youth watch the news about ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s death, in Najaf, Iraq, on Sunday.

Alaa Al-Marjani/Reuters


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Alaa Al-Marjani/Reuters

Iraqi youth watch the news about ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s death, in Najaf, Iraq, on Sunday.

Alaa Al-Marjani/Reuters

In Iraq and Syria, news of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s death has stirred a mix of responses — from joy to disbelief to dread.

Since President Trump announced this weekend that Baghdadi died during a U.S. military operation in Syria, analysts have been grappling with the implications for the militant organization that has now lost its main chief in addition to all the territory it once held in Iraq and Syria.

But in the lands that were under ISIS rule, conspiracy theories are swirling. While many are happy that the man behind much suffering is dead, residents are questioning the details the U.S. has offered about Baghdadi’s demise and whether he died at all. Some even wonder whether he ever existed, suggesting how deep distrust of the U.S. government may run in this part of the world.

“First [President George W.] Bush came and said he killed Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, then [President Barack] Obama came and he said he killed [Osama] bin Laden, now this one comes saying he killed Baghdadi. Every president kills one,” says Zekko Zuhair, a pet store owner in Mosul, Iraq.

People walk near Mosul’s heavily damaged Al-Nuri Mosque, where Baghdadi announced the launch of a caliphate in 2014.

Zaid al-Obeidi/AFP via Getty Images


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People walk near Mosul’s heavily damaged Al-Nuri Mosque, where Baghdadi announced the launch of a caliphate in 2014.

Zaid al-Obeidi/AFP via Getty Images

Mosul is where, in 2014, the ISIS leader declared himself “caliph,” claiming to be a successor to a historical Muslim figure. Baghdadi later went into hiding, while ISIS went on a rampage across Iraq and Syria, imposing its extreme interpretation of Islamic law, recruiting members from around the world to help slaughter civilians, soldiers and rival militants; take hostages for ransom; and women and girls as sex slaves.

Much of Mosul is still recovering from ISIS‘ three-year reign and from the destruction left by U.S.-backed forces battling the militants. Many families have relatives who were killed either by ISIS fighters or during the fierce fighting against them.

Mahmoud Saeed, a local imam, says he recalls the day Baghdadi came to the city surrounded by bodyguards and declared the start of the caliphate from the pulpit of al-Nuri Mosque.

ISIS blew up the al-Nuri Mosque in the battle for Mosul before it was driven out of the area in 2017.

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ISIS blew up the al-Nuri Mosque in the battle for Mosul before it was driven out of the area in 2017.

Jane Arraf/NPR

“We did not choose him,” Saeed says.

Still, even after news of Baghdadi’s death, Saeed and friends have been discussing whether he was invented by the U.S.

When asked who the man really was, Saeed says: “We don’t know — ask America. Ask Donald Trump.”

Mosul resident Marwa Khaled is with her 5-year-old son, Mohaiman, who’s holding a plastic toy rifle almost as big as he is. Mohaiman never met his father, a police officer who was killed by ISIS.

“I’m happy but I’m not sure about the news,” Khaled says. “We didn’t see a body, we didn’t see anything.”

President Trump announced on Sunday that Baghdadi had died during a U.S. military operation in northwest Syria the night before.

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President Trump announced on Sunday that Baghdadi had died during a U.S. military operation in northwest Syria the night before.

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According to Trump, as U.S. special forces attacked the compound where Baghdadi was hiding out, the ISIS leader ran into a dead-end tunnel and detonated a suicide vest that killed him and three children.

Trump said he is considering making some of the footage of the raid public “so that [Baghdadi’s] followers and all of these young kids that want to leave various countries, including the United States, they should see how he died. He didn’t die a hero. He died a coward.”

In spite of Trump’s claims of victory over ISIS, Baghdadi’s death does not represent the end of the group, says Mansour Marid, the governor of Nineveh, Iraq.

“This is only one page of the situation, and we presume there is another page to it,” says Marid. “The important thing is to end the ideology, otherwise with these kind of men, one leader goes, another will come in his place.”

A worker in Mosul, Iraq, assesses the damage in the al-Nuri Mosque compound. Workers are reconstructing the mosque’s al-Hadba minaret.

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A worker in Mosul, Iraq, assesses the damage in the al-Nuri Mosque compound. Workers are reconstructing the mosque’s al-Hadba minaret.

Jane Arraf/NPR

“Jaded about the United States”

Next door in Syria, many residents who spent years under ISIS rule say they’re thrilled Baghdadi is dead.

“It’s very happy news … because it feels like he’s a personal enemy,” says Mohammed Kheder, who lived under ISIS and leads a group of Syrian researchers called Sound and Picture that documents the militants’ atrocities. “ISIS committed numerous crimes against our sons. … The person responsible for the death of their sons has died.”

Kheder adds that families feel like “they have gotten their revenge, even if it’s from someone who’s also responsible for many deaths of their sons.” The someone he’s referring to is the U.S.-led coalition that defeated ISIS in its capital Raqqa, Syria, but used overwhelming firepower there, which rights groups say killed many more civilians than it did ISIS fighters. “People believe one criminal killed another criminal,” he says.

This attitude doesn’t surprise Jeremy Shapiro, the research director of the European Council on Foreign Relations, who worked on Syria policy at the State Department under the Obama administration. “People in that area are pretty jaded about the United States. The fact that they are not sad that Baghdadi is dead isn’t going to change their opinion of us,” Shapiro says.

In March, U.S.-led forces drove ISIS fighters out of their last held territory in Syria. Now thousands of suspected ISIS fighters are in prisons in the country, and their wives and children are in detention camps. The facilities are run by Syrian Kurdish forces, who have come under heavy attack by Turkey, following Trump’s order for U.S. troops to withdraw from parts of Syria.

A woman walks with children at the Kurdish-run al-Hol camp where families of ISIS foreign fighters are held in northeastern Syria earlier this month.

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A woman walks with children at the Kurdish-run al-Hol camp where families of ISIS foreign fighters are held in northeastern Syria earlier this month.

Delil Souleiman/AFP via Getty Images

NPR contacted a Syrian humanitarian worker who is in touch with detainees in al-Hol camp in northeastern Syria to hear what they are saying about Baghdadi’s death. He called them on their smuggled cellphones and provided recordings of some detainees.

“We are all soldiers of Baghdadi … but the jihad hasn’t stopped,” says one of the women, an Iraqi. “And there’s nothing to prove he died. We heard in the news. It’s been a rumor numerous times. As warriors, we believe that even if Baghdadi dies, the caliphate will not end. … We aren’t just here for one person.”

“If Baghdadi is dead, there are tens of thousands of Baghdadis,” says another detainee, speaking in French. “Do not think we are over. We are like a boiling volcano in constant eruption.”

Some of the women in the camps say they regret joining ISIS. One Tunisian woman tells NPR she is relieved Baghdadi is dead. “He will be rewarded with hell,” she says.

But she and some of the other women detained with her do not trust Trump’s account that Baghdadi died in a cowardly way, she says. “Nobody believes Trump’s tales.”

Fatma Tanis and Jane Arraf reported in Mosul, Iraq; Daniel Estrin and Lama al-Arian reported in Beirut, Lebanon; and Alex Leff contributed from Washington, D.C.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2019/10/29/774129683/we-didn-t-see-a-body-baghdadi-s-death-draws-doubts-in-lands-where-isis-ruled

UPDATE: Pilot missing after plane slams into house. No injuries reported on ground.

A twin-engine plane crashed into a residential neighborhood in Woodbridge Tuesday setting multiple houses on fire, officials said.

The Cessna 414A crashed into a home on Berkley Avenue in the Colonia section of the town around 11 a.m., FAA officials said. The FAA is headed to the scene to begin the investigation.

“The house shook, I thought I heard a tree hit my house,” said Lou Grasso, who lives around the block from the scene. He said it sounded like an explosion.

The Colonia Fire Department confirmed the plane went down but said it didn’t have additional information to provide.

Patti Sapone | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

A twin-engine plane crashed into a residential area in Woodbridge on Tuesday, setting multiple houses ablaze.

It was unclear how many people were on board the Cessna 414A. The plane can hold up to 8 people, including pilots.

Woodbridge Mayor John McCormac said there were no injuries to people on the ground and no one was home at the house that was struck by the plane. McCormac said the plane appears to have originated in Virginia and there were no passengers.

“The home suffered some damage,” McCormac said “So right now, we don’t believe any civilians on the ground were impacted by the crash. Although the pilot — who knows. Nobody knows for sure yet. Nobody’s gotten close to the plane. Miracles can happen.”

A check of flight records showed a Cessna 414A departed from Leesburg Executive Airport in Virginia at 9:50 a.m. and was bound for Linden Airport with an expected landing at 10:58 a.m. That plane was manufactured in 1980 and owned by a Delaware-based company called Warbird Associates, according to the FAA.

The crash site is about 4 miles from Linden Airport.

“The plane is in the back of the house,” McCormac said. “You can’t see the plane from the street. It’s still apparently lodged in the house. The lady next door got out safely.”

Firefighters from all nine firehouses in Woodbridge responded to the blaze, according to the mayor.

The National Transportation Safety Board also will investigate and will determine probable cause of the accident.

Jenna Wise | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

A twin-engine plane crashed into a residential area in Woodbridge on Tuesday, setting multiple houses ablaze.

Patti Sapone | NJ Advance Media for Nj.com

A twin-engine plane crashed into a residential area in Woodbridge on Tuesday, setting multiple houses ablaze.

Source Article from https://www.nj.com/middlesex/2019/10/small-plane-strikes-home-in-woodbridge.html

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Rory Cellan-Jones

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BBC technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones said “his wonderful dog (name not declassified)… did such a great job in the park this morning”.

Donald Trump’s tweet picturing a dog that helped “capture and kill” the Islamic State group’s leader is inspiring dog owners to share pictures.

The Belgian malinois was injured when Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi killed himself during a US military raid on his hideout in Syria.

The US president tweeted: “We have declassified a picture of the wonderful dog (name not declassified) that did such a great job in capturing and killing the leader of IS… Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.”

And with more than 428,000 “likes” and 102,000 retweets, that tweet has inspired lots of people to “declassify” pictures of their own dogs.

Keith Sonia chose to “declassify” both his dog’s picture and his name, on Twitter, saying while George may not be “a war hero”, he does a “good job sleeping like a human sleeps”.

Elizabeth McLaughlin says her dog likes a gossip with the neighbours. Crows, the wind and the “nasty corgi around the corner” are all topics of conversation.

At a press conference on Monday at the Pentagon, Gen Mark A Milley, the highest ranking member of the US military, told reporters the dog’s name was not being released to protect its identity as it was “still in theatre”.

He went on to say the dog had performed a “tremendous service”.

There have been nearly 100,000 tweets containing the words “declassified” and “dog” since the president’s tweet.

Some are hoping when the name of the dog is declassified, it will be “awesome”.

And even BBC technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones has joined in.

And for those who are wondering, here is the original declassified dog.

You may also be interested in:

Source Article from https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-50218995

As wildfires continue to blaze through California, use our interactive map to see the perimeter of the fires as they grow.

Among the biggest threats is the Kincade fire in wine country north of San Francisco. That fire had burned through more than 73,000 acres, approximately 110 square miles, and was only 15 percent contained as of Monday night.

In Southern California, firefighters are battling the Getty fire that has consumed over 600 acres on a hillside in West Los Angeles.

The Oak fire just north on U.S. 101 has also kept Los Angeles County firefighters busy.

A little to the north, in the San Fernando Valley, the Tick fire has scorched more than 4,600 acres. That blaze began after the start of the Saddle Ridge fire, also in the San Fernando Valley, which at its height killed one person and charred about 8,800 acres.

The Palisades fire last week forced the evacuation of at least 628 homes by the scenic Los Angeles shoreline.

To the north, the Caples fire consumed more than 3,400 acres in El Dorado County west of Sacramento and was 87 percent contained by Sunday. The Burris fire in Mendocino County burned though hundreds of acres and was 50 percent contained on Monday.

The South fire in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest has scorched more than 2,400 acres since it started in September. In San Bernardino County, firefighters have kept the Old Water fire to about 145 acres. And the Johnson fire in Riverside County has consumed around 75 acres.

Source Article from https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/map-how-big-are-california-fires-see-size-shape-dozens-n1073266

Sitting in the Santa Monica Mountains, the Getty Center is no stranger to wildfires in its proximity. Just two years ago during the Skirball Fire, a small fire started on the museum’s adjoining hill. It was put out without incident, in part thanks to the Getty’s massive irrigation system.

“The safest place for the artwork to be is right here in the Getty Center,” then-vice president of communications for the J. Paul Getty Trust, Ron Hartwig, said at the time.

On Monday, an even larger fire that bears the museum’s name – the Getty Fire – was burning near its campus and forced thousands to evacuate the area. But the museum, home to 1,000-year-old manuscripts, multimillion-dollar paintings and the world’s largest art library, has no plans to evacuate its treasures. The museum holds 125,000 objects of art and 1.4 million volumes in its library.

“We’ve sealed all of the archives, all of the galleries. No one is going in or out,” current vice president of communications Lisa Lapin said.

Kincade fire: ‘Diablo’ winds are fanning the northern California wildfires

Getty fire: ‘Dynamic’ wildfire in Los Angeles drives more evacuations in California

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The Getty Center’s security team heard news of the fire crackling on the scanner shortly before 2 a.m. Monday. The museum’s emergency operations center was activated.

Heavy, double doors locked in place, hermetically sealing every gallery – including a current exhibition of irreplaceable Manet paintings – and archive zone. The air system switched to recycled – much like a car – guaranteeing smoky outside air couldn’t reach the artworks and historic documents, explained Lapin. 

Why the Getty is so fire-resistant

The $1 billion complex was designed by Richard Meier and completed more than 20 years ago. His design included safeguards for both earthquakes and fires.

The complex includes 1.3 million square feet of thick travertine stone, a highly fire-resistant material that lines the museum buildings’ outside walls. The crushed stone used on the roofs of the museum buildings is also fire-resistant.

Inside, reinforced concrete walls and automatic folding fire doors can trap fires in the unlikely event fire enters or starts inside. The Getty’s air-conditioning system can push smoke out instead of letting it in.

On-site is also a 1 million-gallon water tank that sits underground, below the museum’s parking lot. It supplies water to an irrigation system that includes a network of pipes on the property.

But the idea is to avoid a fire – and water damage. 

“You don’t want to use sprinklers if possible,” noted Lapin, because water could damage fragile, rare works.

How close did the Getty Fire come to the museum?

The fire did reach the campus, Lapin said, racing down from a ridge above to the Tram parking area where all visitors begin their journey, about a mile below the main campus. When day broke, helicopters and air tankers began “an aggressive attack” on the flames, said Lapin. “They’re real heroes.”

The outdoor visitor plaza and sculptures have also not been damaged, she said. “We will be cleaning up some ash, though.”  

By mid-morning, fire trucks were parked in the central plaza, as a precaution, but also because the spot offers excellent views of the surrounding hillsides and canyons, where the fire had fingered its way in, burning some homes.

The complex is normally closed on Mondays to the public, but nearly all of the 800 to 1,000 staff were told to work from home, with a core group of about a dozen staffers, along with full security teams, at the on-site emergency center. 

As of early Monday afternoon, the Getty Fire was at zero containment and had grown to 618 acres. About 1,100 firefighters were battling the blaze.

Follow Janet Wilson and Nate Chute on Twitter: @janetwilson66 @nchute.

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2019/10/29/getty-fire-getty-center-safest-place-for-art-during-la-wildfires/2493715001/