Santa Barbara County News and Events

TSA workers face reality of working without pay as passengers unaware of the shutdown see long lines

Kraig Pakulski 0 26 Article rating: No rating

By Alexandra Skores, CNN

Washington, DC (CNN) — More than a third of the security screeners at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport didn’t show up to work Tuesday, the airport’s general manager said, causing passengers to have to wait in line for up to two hours.

Long lines have stretched through different airports this week as Transportation Security Administration officers worked without pay during the busy spring break travel season.

On Friday, more than half of TSA employees called out at Houston’s William P. Hobby International Airport.

They are among the 61,000 government employees in the Department of Homeland Security caught in the middle as Congress remains locked in a stalemate over funding the agency.

“The traveling public has been really nice,” said Aaron Barker, the local American Federation of Government Employees union president for Atlanta. “What is shocking, though, is a lot of people are unaware that we are in a government shutdown.”

Employees are dealing with “eviction notices, vehicle repossessions, empty refrigerators and overdrawn bank accounts,” he said, while the travelers they serve may not even realize the hardship.

At least 366 transportation security officers have quit since the start of the most recent shutdown, according to DHS.

What workers are dealing with

These workers have been through three lapses in funding resulting in missed pay over the past six months, DHS noted in a news release Tuesday.

Late last year, the longest government shutdown in US history ended after federal workers, including TSA officers and Federal Aviation Administration air traffic controllers, went without pay for 43 days. Some stopped showing up to their jobs to make ends meet elsewhere, disrupting travel.

The workers received their back pay days after the shutdown ended, but for some it took until February to pay off debts, AFGE told CNN.

A brief shutdown happened again in late January and lasted only a few days before Congress funded the department for two weeks. That money ran out in mid-February and DHS employees started missing paychecks again.

“I’ve heard from officers who cannot afford copayments for cancer treatments or office visits for their sick children,” Barker said.

Some airports have started asking travelers to assist the TSA officers. Denver International Airport, Seattle-Tacoma International Airport and Harry Reid International Airport in Las Vegas have requested donations of items, including grocery and gas gift cards, non-perishable food, hygiene products and infant supplies.

The city of Atlanta is providing TSA officers with two meal vouchers per shift and free parking, according to a statement from Mayor Andre Dickens on Monday.

Austin-Bergstrom International Airport had a burger truck deliver food to TSA employees on Tuesday.

At Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport, the Anne Arundel County Food Bank delivered boxes of food for the airport’s 600 TSA employees, the food bank said in a statement.

While the support is appreciated, it’s not enough for workers losing thousands of do

Conclusiones de las elecciones primarias de Illinois

Kraig Pakulski 0 22 Article rating: No rating

Por Eric Bradner, CNN

Al nominar este martes a la vicegobernadora Juliana Stratton para el Senado, los demócratas de Illinois eligieron a una candidata cuyo mensaje incluía un anuncio de televisión en el que aparecían personas diciendo “que se jo** Trump”.

Stratton fue seleccionada por encima de un rival más moderado y con mayor financiación, el representante Raja Krishnamoorthi, así como de la representante Robin Kelly.

La victoria de Stratton, impulsada por un amplio margen en Chicago y reforzada por resultados mejores de lo esperado en sus suburbios, se produjo en unas elecciones primarias en las que había un escaño vacante en el Senado y cuatro en la Cámara de Representantes.

Es probable que los demócratas ganen todos esos escaños en noviembre. Sin embargo, las divisiones más profundas del partido —sobre ideología, relevo generacional, cómo abordar la relación con Israel y otros temas— quedaron patentes en las primarias de este martes.

En definitiva, es probable que los resultados no contribuyan a zanjar los prolongados debates sobre el futuro del partido.

Los candidatos respaldados por grupos proisraelíes y pro-criptomonedas ganaron algunas contiendas clave, pero perdieron otras.

Un candidato progresista que prometía un cambio generacional no logró la victoria en una contienda por un escaño en la Cámara de Representantes en el área de Chicago, pero el ganador de esa elección también se enfrentó a la organización de presión proisraelí American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC).

Y un exmiembro del Congreso consiguió regresar a la política, mientras que otro reconoció su derrota.

Aquí hay cinco conclusiones de las primarias de Illinois:

El mayor ganador de las primarias podría ser el principal impulsor de Stratton: el gobernador J.B Pritzker.

El gobernador demócrata, considerado por muchos como un posible candidato presidencial para 2028, no tuvo oposición en sus primarias para un tercer mandato.

Sin embargo, Pritzker invirtió millones de dólares para impulsar la candidatura de Stratton frente a dos miembros del Congreso en la contienda para reemplazar al senador demócrata saliente Dick Durbin.

Pritzker, el multimillonario heredero de una fortuna en el sector hotelero, celebró con un encendido discurso el martes por la noche, arremetiendo contra Trump y dejando claro una vez más cuál es su postura mientras el partido comienza a definir qué busca en su próximo candidato.

Calificó al presidente como “el principal charlatán de feria” y a los republicanos que lo apoyan en el Congreso y en la Casa Blanca como “estafadores corruptos y egoístas, promotores de la intolerancia y el odio”.

“Todo lo que nos importa está bajo asedio por parte de Washington”, señaló Pritzker.

Si Stratton gana en noviembre —y en Illinois, un estado tradicionalmente demócrata, es la gran favorita frente al candidato republicano, el expresidente del Partido Republicano de Illinois, Don Tracy— aportaría una energía más progresista al Senado, justo cuando los demócratas se enfrentan a lo que podría ser un cambio de guardia.

Durbin, de 81 años, es el segundo demócrata de mayor rango en el Senado. Stratton, de 60 años, ha declarado que no apoyará al líder de la minoría en el Senado, Chuck Schumer, como líder del grupo parlamentario demócrata.

En un discurso pronunciado el martes para celebrar su victoria, Stratton prometió abordar una serie de objetivos políticos progresistas, y prometió a sus seguidores

Iran’s chokehold on Hormuz threatens India’s beloved samosas and chai

Kraig Pakulski 0 32 Article rating: No rating

By Esha Mitra and Rhea Mogul, CNN

(CNN) — Iran’s chokehold on the Strait of Hormuz has sparked global fears of fuel pumps running dry, but in India, it’s also leaving a bad taste in the mouth of some restaurateurs and street stall diners, with samosas off the menu and the ubiquitous chai lacking its usual aroma in parts of the country.

The world’s fastest-growing major economy imports about 85% of its liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) from the Middle East, much of it used in cooking food for its 1.4 billion people.

With supplies impacted by the US-Israel war with Iran, the government has begun diverting the precious fuel away from industrial users, like canteens, hotels and restaurants, to keep flames alight on household stoves.

In a bid to keep their kitchens running, some chefs are looking for alternatives or limiting certain menu items. Some are turning to induction hobs. The problem? Traditional Indian cuisine and electromagnetic coils are not entirely compatible.

Indian cooking is an alchemy of high heat, a heavy cast iron pan, and open flames. Without the fire of a gas stove, curries lack their depth, tandoori marinades refuse to char, and the beloved samosa – a flaky pastry that relies on the intense, sustained heat of bubbling oil – turns into a pale mess.

Chetan Singh, owner of Gulabji Chai, a popular restaurant in the northwestern city of Jaipur, said the LPG shortages have forced them to remove their most “iconic items like bun butter and samosa” from the menu.

“(It is what) people queue up for here normally,” he said. “So people are disappointed because it’s one of the stops that people make while visiting Jaipur.”

They have also had to compromise on how they prepare their famous chai – a fragrant, milky black tea infused with spices.

“We are boiling chai on the induction top but it’s not the same, it doesn’t get the same flavor,” he said. “We have limited our menu, but none of it really tastes the same. Because there’s a certain heat and flavor that you can only get from a gas stove.”

In a bid to address the shortages, domestic LPG production from refineries has increased by about 38%, the Indian government said in a statement Tuesday.

Steps are also being taken to “curb hoarding and black marketing of LPG across the country,” it said, adding that more than 15,000 cylinders had been seized during raids.

But the uncertainty is disrupting the fast-paced rhythm of Indian street food and quick-service dining.

Akhil Iyer, founder of Benne Dosa, a restaurant with chains in Delhi and Mumbai, said he has had to adapt to keep his kitchen running.

“We’ve switched to induction for our idlis, and for all our fried items,” he said. “Whatever we could take off the gas, we have.”

Yet, while steaming and deep-frying can survive the transition to electric heat, the star of Iyer’s menu cannot.

“We did a trial with induction (for our dosa) and we found that the quality was not good enough,” he said. “(It) needs the flame, it needs gas, it needs fire. We cook on a cast iron top, it needs the heat to get crisp and therefore to deliver the quality that we want to serve.”

At one of Iyer’s branches in the financial hub of Mumbai, they have stopped selling their dosa because they are down to their last cylinder, he said. At their operation in Delhi, chefs continue to use gas cylinders, albeit at a “reduced capacity,” according to Iyer.

Last week, residents in several cities were seen queuing outside gas distribution centers for hours, some arriving as early as 3 a.m. to secure a cylinder for their home.

Over the weekend, two India

Prep scores from baseball, softball and volleyball

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San Marcos wins in baseball, softball and boys volleyball

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) -

Baseball:

San Marcos 7, Ventura 3

Rio Mesa 4, Santa Barbara 1

Pacifica 10, Dos Pueblos 2

Softball:

San Marcos 1, Ventura 0

Dos Pueblos 23, Pacifica 1

Boys Volleyball:

San Marcos 3, Rio Mesa 0

Santa Barbara 3, Oxnard 0

Ventura 3, Dos Pueblos 2

Providence 3, Laguna Blanca 1

The post Prep scores from baseball, softball and volleyball appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

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