Extreme weather is a menace to homes. Here’s how you can protect your investment

Kraig Pakulski 0 13 Article rating: No rating

By Ella Nilsen, CNN

(CNN) — Extreme weather has impacted every corner of the US, from deadly floods to sweltering heat. For Americans, the changing climate has made protecting their homes increasingly important.

Finding a “climate haven” in the United States has become more difficult with the warming planet. Storms can dump biblical amounts of rain in mountainous regions from Vermont to Kentucky to New Mexico. In 2023, Phoenix spent over 50 days baking in over 110-degree Fahrenheit heat, and the city hit triple digits in March this year. The rest of the Southeast is staring down a historically dry start to the year, with fears about wildfires and drought.

But there are key ways to make your home more resilient to a hotter climate and stronger weather, experts say. Much of it begins even before you buy the house.

Information is power

Some of the most important decisions you can make to climate-proof your home happen before the sale closes, experts told CNN. In many cases, learning about the natural environment around a home matters just as much as learning about the home itself.

“The first step to protecting yourself from climate risk during the home buying process is simply knowing what the risk actually is,” Jeremy Porter, chief economist at risk modeling company First Street, wrote in an email to CNN.

First Street uses models to generate risk scores for climate change-fueled disasters like wildfires, coastal and rainstorm flooding, high winds, extreme heat and air quality. These risk scores are displayed on real estate websites including Redfin and Realtor.com.

(Zillow stopped featuring First Street’s climate data on home listings last year, after facing pressure from the California Regional Multiple Listing Service, a subscriber-based listing service. However, Zillow still links its data.)

Especially as home insurance costs in some areas climb, a prospective homebuyer looking at their risk profile “gets a much clearer picture of what that home will really cost them year over year,” Porter said.

Find an area that can handle storms

Prospective homeowners may want to find towns that are intentionally designed to withstand stronger storms, bigger wildfires or even hotter temperatures.

For example, the town of Babcock Ranch lies 50 miles south of Tampa on Florida’s Gulf Coast and has successfully weathered multiple major hurricanes.

The town was built to withstand stronger storms with a natural wetland barrier and a series of interconnected lakes that serve as catch basins for excess flood water. And Babcock Ranch buried power lines and built a vast solar array to keep the lights on during four major hurricanes in the last nine years.

But most prospective homeowners don’t have the advantage of buying into a town that was intentionally designed to withstand extreme weather. When looking in mountainous areas, find homes at higher elevations and away from rivers or streams – or engineer earthen berms and swales that help guide flooding runoff away from the home, experts say.

Small ways to climate-proof your home

Homeowners “at pretty much any budget” can make their homes more resilient, Porter said.

People at risk of flooding can extend their downspouts farther away from their home’s foundation or seal foundation cracks. For those at risk of high winds, trimming trees near the house and reinforcing the garage door are lower-cost fixes.

People living in an area with wildfire risk can keep dry vegetation away from their houses and install vent screens resistant to embers. Far more expensive options include fortifying a home’s roof and siding to be resistant to wind or wildfire or fully elevating a home in a flood-prone area.

Once again, looking at the environment around the home is a good starting point. Having a home o

Reino Unido publica documentos sobre el nombramiento de Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor como enviado comercial

Kraig Pakulski 0 15 Article rating: No rating

Por Christian Edwards, CNN

El gobierno de Reino Unido publicó el jueves un conjunto de documentos relacionados con el nombramiento de Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor como enviado comercial en 2001, cargo al que el expríncipe renunció una década después debido a sus vínculos con el delincuente sexual convicto Jeffrey Epstein.

Esta noticia está en desarrollo.

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™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

The post Reino Unido publica documentos sobre el nombramiento de Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor como enviado comercial appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

5 things to know for May 21: AI, compensation fund, Iran’s weapons, California wildfires, food preservatives

Kraig Pakulski 0 13 Article rating: No rating


CNN

By Alexandra Banner, CNN

Stephen Colbert will sign off from “The Late Show” tonight, ending his run in the storied CBS chair once occupied by David Letterman. What comes next for one of TV’s biggest personalities is an open question as others across the industry try to navigate the fragile world of network comedy.Write a short intro with link to story.

Here’s what else you need to know to get up to speed and on with your day.

1⃣ Artificial intelligence

Concerns about artificial intelligence replacing human workers have simmered over the past year as companies slash headcounts, saying automation will streamline operations and cut costs. Officials have also warned that increasingly advanced AI systems could intensify cyberattacks and other digital threats. Amid those concerns, the White House could issue an executive order as soon as today that would push for a government review of new AI models before they’re released publicly. Read more.

MEANWHILE: AI turned Samsung into a $1 trillion company. Its workers want a bigger slice of the pie

2⃣ Compensation fund

The Trump administration has created a nearly $1.8 billion fund to compensate people who claim they faced political persecution. But the effort is already facing legal challenges: Two police officers who defended the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, when Trump supporters rioted, are now suing to stop any payout to violent protesters who could benefit. Read more.

INTERACTIVE: The Trump “Anti-Weaponization Fund” documents, annotated

3⃣ Iran’s weapons

Iran is rebuilding its military capabilities much faster than expected following recent US-Israeli strikes on its weapons infrastructure. Sources tell CNN that Iran has already restarted some drone production during the six-week ceasefire that began in early April, a sign it is rapidly restoring its degraded military capabilities. Read more.

4⃣ California wildfires

Multiple wildfires have prompted evacuation warnings for tens of thousands in Southern California. A massive blaze that officials say was “human-caused” has scorched nearly a third of Santa Rosa Island in Channel Islands National Park, threatening a fragile ecosystem that is home to dozens of rare plants and animals — including some found nowhere else on Earth. Read more.

WATCH: More than a dozen fires rage across California

5⃣ Food presevatives

Common food preservatives often marketed as “natural” may be linked to an increased risk of high blood pressure and heart disease, according to a new study. Researchers found that people who consumed more foods containing

5 things to know for May 21: AI, compensation fund, Iran’s weapons, California wildfires, food preservatives

Kraig Pakulski 0 13 Article rating: No rating

By Alexandra Banner, CNN

Stephen Colbert will sign off from “The Late Show” tonight, ending his run in the storied CBS chair once occupied by David Letterman. What comes next for one of TV’s biggest personalities is an open question as others across the industry try to navigate the fragile world of network comedy.Write a short intro with link to story.

Here’s what else you need to know to get up to speed and on with your day.

1⃣ Artificial intelligence

Concerns about artificial intelligence replacing human workers have simmered over the past year as companies slash headcounts, saying automation will streamline operations and cut costs. Officials have also warned that increasingly advanced AI systems could intensify cyberattacks and other digital threats. Amid those concerns, the White House could issue an executive order as soon as today that would push for a government review of new AI models before they’re released publicly. Read more.

MEANWHILE: AI turned Samsung into a $1 trillion company. Its workers want a bigger slice of the pie

2⃣ Compensation fund

The Trump administration has created a nearly $1.8 billion fund to compensate people who claim they faced political persecution. But the effort is already facing legal challenges: Two police officers who defended the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, when Trump supporters rioted, are now suing to stop any payout to violent protesters who could benefit. Read more.

INTERACTIVE: The Trump “Anti-Weaponization Fund” documents, annotated

3⃣ Iran’s weapons

Iran is rebuilding its military capabilities much faster than expected following recent US-Israeli strikes on its weapons infrastructure. Sources tell CNN that Iran has already restarted some drone production during the six-week ceasefire that began in early April, a sign it is rapidly restoring its degraded military capabilities. Read more.

4⃣ California wildfires

Multiple wildfires have prompted evacuation warnings for tens of thousands in Southern California. A massive blaze that officials say was “human-caused” has scorched nearly a third of Santa Rosa Island in Channel Islands National Park, threatening a fragile ecosystem that is home to dozens of rare plants and animals — including some found nowhere else on Earth. Read more.

WATCH: More than a dozen fires rage across California

5⃣ Food presevatives

Common food preservatives often marketed as “natural” may be linked to an increased risk of high blood pressure and heart disease, according to a new study. Researchers found that people who consumed more foods containing additives like citric acid and ascorbic acid (widely known as vitamin C) had a 22% greater risk of developing high blood pressure. Read more.

Breakfast browse

Best US beaches for 2026

Queen Elizabeth II was ‘very keen’ Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor had ‘prominent role’ promoting UK interests, documents show

Kraig Pakulski 0 14 Article rating: No rating

By Christian Edwards, CNN

London (CNN) — The late Queen Elizabeth II was “very keen” for her son, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, to take on a “prominent role” in promoting Britain’s national interests, a former official previously said, according to a trove of documents relating to the former prince’s appointment as a British trade envoy in 2001.

In a memo to the then-Foreign Secretary Robin Cook dated February 2000, David Wright, then chief executive of government body British Trade International, said that “the Queen’s wish” was for Mountbatten-Windsor to serve as a trade envoy, and that the role would “fit well” with the end of his career in the British Navy.

The exchange was detailed in a batch of documents released Thursday by the British government relating to Mountbatten-Windsor’s appointment as trade envoy, a role from which the former prince stood down in 2011 over his ties to the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Lawmakers agreed in February to publish documents related to Mountbatten-Windsor’s appointment to the post, days after the disgraced royal was briefly arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office.

Mountbatten-Windsor’s arrest came after the US Department of Justice released documents related to its investigation into Epstein that raised questions about the former prince’s dealings with the financier while he was a trade envoy.

In the wake of the arrest, Britain’s Liberal Democrats, an opposition party, asked the government to release all papers related to the creation of the role of “Special Representative for Trade and Investment” and Mountbatten-Windsor’s appointment to that position.

This is a developing story. More to come.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2026 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.

The post Queen Elizabeth II was ‘very keen’ Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor had ‘prominent role’ promoting UK interests, documents show appeared first on News Channel 3-12.

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