Montreal restaurants adapt to rising costs, but worry customers might be priced out
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 04:16:34 GMT
MONTREAL — As Montreal restaurants adapt to rising costs and impending deadlines to repay loans issued during the pandemic, one well-known chef says she worries about the future of the city’s famed dining scene.Dyan Solomon, who owns three restaurants in the city, said that in the past, Montreal’s famously low rents meant chefs could open their own places, and restaurants were able to thrive in part because customers had the disposable income to eat out.But as rents rise, along with the price of food and labour, she worries the independent restaurants that have become the hallmark of Montreal’s dining scene won’t survive, leaving mostly chains and fast-food eateries, with only the most elite fine dining establishments on the higher end.“That’s really sad and depressing, but it looks a little bit like … that is what will happen,” she said. “I don’t see how it can’t. You’re not going to pay $40 for a sandwich.”Sol...Thousands break into aid warehouses in Gaza as deaths top 8,000 and Israel widens ground offensive
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 04:16:34 GMT
DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — Thousands of people broke into aid warehouses in Gaza to take flour and basic hygiene products, a U.N. agency said Sunday, in a mark of growing desperation and the breakdown of public order three weeks into the war between Israel and Gaza’s militant Hamas rulers.Tanks and infantry pushed into Gaza over the weekend as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced a “second stage” in the war, three weeks after Hamas launched a brutal incursion into Israel. The widening ground offensive came as Israel also pounded the territory from air, land and sea.Gaza’s Health Ministry said the death toll among Palestinians has passed 8,000 — mostly women and minors. It’s a toll without precedent in decades of Israeli-Palestinian violence, and one that is expected to climb even more rapidly as Israel presses its ground offensive.The bombardment over the weekend — described by Gaza residents as the most intense of the war — knocked out most co...2 airlifted to hospital, woman charged with DUI after multi-vehicle crash on I-80 in NW Indiana
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 04:16:34 GMT
HAMMAOND, Ind. -- Two people were airlifted and a woman faces driving while intoxicated charges after a multi-vehicle crash on I-80 in Northwest Indiana early Sunday morning, Indiana State Police said. 33-year-old Rivianna Gilmore from Calumet Park faces multiple felonies of operating while intoxicated causing serious injury, endangering and multiple other misdemeanors. According to Indiana State Police, around 4:14 a.m., a black Nissan struck an arrow board sign on the right shoulder that warned traffic of an approaching lane shift. Th arrow board landed in the travel portion of the roadway which caused two other crashes when drivers were attempting to avoid debris from the initial crash. Troopers said the driver of one of the vehicles was pinned to their van and had to be extracted and airlifted to Chicago for life threatehing injuries. A second driver, that was operating a black GMC pickup, was also later air-lifted to Oak Lawn for tratment of seriosu injuries. The third driver r...Austin Water leader responds to KXAN Investigation over customers’ smart meter complaints
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 04:16:34 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) – Following a KXAN investigation in September showing customers’ concerns of suspected overbilling with Austin Water’s new smart meters, the director of Austin Water is defending the digital meters’ accuracy and how the agency collects and responds to complaints. Customers complain of suspected inaccuracies with Austin Water’s new smart meters “It’s a big city and a big job but we have a lot of professionals here who are committed to excellent customer service,” Austin Water Director Shay Ralls Roalson told KXAN Investigator Mike RushEven so, more customers reached out to KXAN after our initial investigation with similar concerns.Kimi, who did not want to disclose her last name, is one of them. The Northwest Hills resident said, ever since her analog water meter was replaced with a digital meter, “This water usage is just way out of whack.”Kimi in Northwest Hills believes her new digital meter is giving false readings, doubling the amount of water she said she normal...Oil, gas regulators boost KP Kauffman’s proposed $10M well cleanup bond to $133M
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 04:16:34 GMT
In a move regulators said shows they are serious about making the oil and gas industry clean up after itself, the Colorado Energy and Carbon Management Commission rejected a company’s plan for financing its cleanup costs.The ECMC unanimously voted against the plan by K.P. Kauffman Co. Thursday after several hours of testimony stretching over three days. The company originally proposed putting up $10.3 million to ensure it will take care of all its wells. ECMC members voted to require the company to provide roughly $133 million over 10 years.A so-called financial assurance plan is required of all oil and gas companies under new rules approved in 2022 and are intended to ensure that operators have enough money to cover the cost of closing wells and reclaiming well sites.Previous required bonds were seen as too low, making it easier for some companies to walk away rather than pay to plug a well, clean up the site and restore surrounding land.“In order for us to make a state...How should we manage the drying Colorado River? Here’s what’s at stake in negotiations for its long-term future
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 04:16:34 GMT
An immediate crisis on the Colorado River has been averted, but negotiators now must turn their attention to the next problem at hand: How will they manage the drying river after the current guidelines expire at the end of 2026?Federal officials announced this week that last winter’s heavy snowpack and cuts in use likely will be enough to keep the river basin’s two major reservoirs, Lake Mead and Lake Powell, from draining to water levels too low to generate power or move water downstream for at least three years.Federal officials, the seven Colorado River basin states and 30 tribes in the basin are negotiating the future of water management on the Colorado River and creating the next set of guidelines that will govern use of the critical water source in decades to come. The negotiations will be a “rollercoaster ride,” but history shows that the states are capable of coming to a consensus, said Jennifer Gimbel, a senior water policy scholar with Colorado Stat...Nuggets’ Justin Holiday has two halves of a ring ceremony, but they don’t make a whole
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 04:16:34 GMT
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Justin Holiday experienced the Nuggets’ championship ring ceremony on opening night the same way he received his own ring seven years ago: off to the side.Denver’s only NBA-specific free agent addition of the 2023 offseason stood by the bench Tuesday night, watching as his new teammates collected their hardware. He soaked in the atmosphere, thinking it was a cool event to witness and experience, even though he wasn’t part of the 2022-23 championship team.“It’s funny,” he reflected, “because I’ve won a championship before, and I wasn’t actually there for that ring ceremony. So that was my first one.”No better way to summarize Holiday’s career.He’s never in one place too long. The Nuggets are his 10th NBA team. He hasn’t played 200 games with any of the previous nine. He’s had multiple stints with two franchises. Played professionally in two European countries. Been waived four t...Nuggets Journal: In new NBA in-season tournament, Denver will encounter how wild the West is
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 04:16:34 GMT
Only one game into the season, the arduous but invigorating obstacle imposed by the next 81 was already on Michael Porter Jr.’s mind.The Nuggets had just taken care of the Lakers by double digits on opening night. When asked about Los Angeles, Porter’s mind drifted a bit, and he repeated a point he made at preseason media day.“I think the West is so crazy this season,” he said. “That’s why we had such an emphasis on starting strong. Because from top to bottom, the West is unbelievable.”Another incentive for the defending champions to start strong? Another championship, of course. When the Nuggets host the Mavericks next Friday (8 p.m., ESPN), that and six other games will mark the beginning of the NBA’s inaugural attempt at a league-wide, in-season tournament. A champ will be crowned Dec. 9 in Vegas, but first comes a group stage that will take place throughout the course of November and count toward teams’ regular-season records. Thin...Me & My Car: Oakland man’s ’92 Allanté one of Cadillac’s unique models
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 04:16:34 GMT
Did you ever have a friend tell you that they just bought a major appliance, maybe a new refrigerator, and they say “It’s the Cadillac of refrigerators?” To that friend, this means there isn’t a better refrigerator on the market and they wanted to let you know they spent a lot of money for it.Related ArticlesLocal News | Me & My Car: Pleasanton man owns first-, last-generation Thunderbirds Local News | Me & My Car: ’71 Pantera in Livermore proved to be a good investment Local News | Me & My Car: East Bay owner loves his 1947 Willys Jeep pickup truck That reference didn’t happen by accident. Cadillac has been around a long time, going back to 1902 when Henry Ford and his investors had a disagreement with Ford actually leaving the Henry Ford Co. but leaving the company’s name unchanged. The surviving investors hired Henry Leland, an automotive engineer, and started a new company called the Cadillac Automobile Co.,...When Idiot Savants Do Climate Economics
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 04:16:34 GMT
William Nordhaus speaks during a press conference after winning the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences at Yale University in New Haven, Conn., on Oct. 8, 2018.Photo: Eduardo Munoz Alvarez/Getty ImagesWilliam Nordhaus, who turned 82 this year, was the first economist in our time to attempt to quantify the cost of climate change. His climate-modeling wizardry, which won him the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 2018, has made him one of the world’s most consequential thinkers. His ideas have been adopted by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, global risk managers, the financial services industry, and universities worldwide that teach climate economics. Nordhaus’s work literally could affect the lives of billions of people. This is because his quantification of the immediate costs of climate action — as balanced against the long-term economic harms of not acting — is the basis of key proposals to mitigate carbon emissions. ...Latest news
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