One more body was recovered from the rubble yesterday of the collapse of the Champlain Towers South condominium in Surfside, Florida, increasing the confirmed death toll to 12 and leaving 149 people still unaccounted for. The search for survivors is going into a seventh day today since the partial collapse of the 12-study building in the early morning hours last Thursday. Meanwhile, it was reported that the president of the condo's board had written to residents in April about the major work that needed to be done on the building. He said that structural problems found in a 2018 inspection had, quote, "gotten significantly worse," writing, "The concrete deterioration is accelerating."
April letter to residents of the Miami Beach-area condo that partially collapsed last week said the building's "concrete deterioration is accelerating" and warned that damage "would begin to multiply exponentially." https://t.co/jXYcPeErJ6
— NBC News (@NBCNews) June 29, 2021
➤DOZEN DEATHS IN WASHINGTON, OREGON MAY BE DUE TO HISTORIC HEAT WAVE: About a dozen deaths that took place in the last few days in Washington state and Oregon may have been due to the historic heat wave the region's been experiencing. There were also reporters of potentially dozens of heat-related deaths in western Canada, which was being affected by the same "heat dome." The extreme temperatures in cities like Seattle and Portland that were near or over 110 degrees in the past couple of days eased yesterday. However, the dangerous heat moved inland to Spokane, eastern Oregon and Idaho. It reached 109 degrees in Spokane, the highest temperatures ever recorded there.
More than 230 deaths have been reported in British Columbia since Friday as a historic heat wave brought record-high temperatures, officials said Tuesday. The province's chief coroner called it an "unprecedented time." https://t.co/HdpR1dpsMa
— CNN International (@cnni) June 30, 2021
➤SUPREME COURT LETS EVICTION MORATORIUM REMAIN: The Supreme Court yesterday let the pandemic-related ban on evictions remain, rejecting the request by landlords to end the moratorium imposed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on evicting people who can't pay their rent due to the pandemic. The moratorium, which began last year, was just extended by one month until the end of July, but the CDC said it's expected that will be the final extension. The court voted 5-4 to let the moratorium remain, with Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Brett Kavanaugh joining the high court's liberals.
➤KIM JONG UN FIRES SENIOR NORTH KOREAN OFFICIALS, WARNS OF 'GRAVE CONSEQUENCES' RELATED TO PANDEMIC: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un fired several senior officials who failed to enforce the country's strict Covid-19 prevention measures, saying it will have, quote, "grave consequences" for the isolated nation, state media reported yesterday. The unspecified incident was called a "great crisis" by Kim. North Korea hasn't publicly acknowledged having any Covid cases, although experts believe that's unlikely. However, , the North has been able to prevent a major outbreak due to very strict measures, and having an outbreak could be disastrous for the impoverished country that has poor health care infrastructure.
In addition to a gas shortage, prices at the pump are the highest they have been since 2014. https://t.co/BR7TP05UAi
— WTVG 13abc (@13abc) June 29, 2021
➤GAS STATIONS ARE RUNNING OUT OF GAS AHEAD OF THE HOLIDAY WEEKEND: If you’re planning to travel over the upcoming holiday weekend you better make sure you can find some gas. The national average price for a gallon of regular stands at $3.10, the highest since October 2014. It’s also 2% higher than it was on Memorial Day, and 42 percent higher than it was a year ago. At the same time, many gas stations don’t have gas at all. It has nothing to do with the price, or even the supply, of gasoline—it’s due to a shortage of tank truck drivers coupled with rising demand that is causing supply chain bottlenecks and shortages. Experts add that a number of stations are reporting that they are simply not able to get gas delivered for any price. This comes as the AAA forecasts that 43.6 million Americans will travel by car this Fourth of July weekend.
➤"BORING NEWS" CYCLE HURTING MEDIA: Axios said in a new analysis of publishers’ readership and engagement trends that what it calls a "boring news cycle" has hurt media companies readership levels in the months since former President Donald Trump left office. The analysis of Web traffic, social media engagement, and app user sessions further found that outlets that rely most on partisanship and controversy on the left and the right have been particularly hurt, with right-wing outlets seeing some of the biggest drops.
Mainstream publishers have also seen declines, but they've generally been the ones that have had readership fall the least. There's been debate over policy and issues during the Biden administration, but when it comes to personality-based controversy, Rodney Benson, chair of New York University's Department of Media, Culture, and Communication, told Axios of President Biden, "He's not giving the opposition a lot to attack." Axios also said the slower political news cycle has put attention on breaking new stories that might not have gotten as much attention during the Trump presidency.
The @ATLHawks help defense was active in their Game 4 win! #NBABreakdown #NBAPlayoffs
— NBA.com/Stats (@nbastats) June 30, 2021
Game 5 is Thursday at 8:30pm/et on TNT pic.twitter.com/7mUlpepEzs
🏀NBA PLAYOFFS: Results from Conference Finals yesterday:
- Atlanta Hawks 110, Milwaukee Bucks 88 - Series tied at 2-2
🎾SERENA WILLIAMS EXITS WIMBLEDON AFTER INJURED IN FIRST-ROUND MATCH: Serena Williams was forced to exit the Wimbledon tournament Tuesday (June 29th) after injuring her right leg in the first set of her first-round match when she lost her footing. Williams attempted to continue as she tried to hold back tears, but her legs buckled as she tried to reach a shot by 100th-ranked Aliaksandra Sasnovich of Belarus and she fell to her knees. After standing up with the help of her racket, a limping Williams conceded. She said in a statement later, "I was heartbroken to have to withdraw today." Winners on Day Two yesterday included top women's seed Ash Barty, Roger Federer, second-seeded men's player Daniil Medvedev and Williams' sister Venus Williams.
Serena Williams receives a standing ovation from the crowd at #Wimbledon
— ESPN (@espn) June 29, 2021
Williams was forced to retire in the first round of after sustaining an apparent injury. pic.twitter.com/exFZxJJZGh
⚾MISS. STATE BEATS VANDERBILT 13-2 IN COLLEGE WORLD SERIES FINAL, FORCING DECIDING GAME 3: Mississippi State beat Vanderbilt 13-2 in Game 2 of the College World Series final last night, forcing a deciding Game 3 tonight. Pitchers Houston Harding and Preston Johnson combined on a four-hitter for MSU.
⚾WOMAN ACCUSES DODGERS PITCHER BAUER OF ASSAULT: A woman has accused L.A. Dodgers starting pitcher Trevor Bauer of assault related to a sexual encounter in mid-May. Pasadena police are investigating and the woman was granted a domestic violence restraining order against Bauer. Her attorney, Marc Garelick, said his client suffered, quote, "severe physical and emotional pain" as a result of the alleged assault. Bauer's agent, Jon Fetterolf, denied any wrongdoing by his client, saying in a statement that the two had a, quote, "brief and wholly consensual sexual relationship." He stated, "We have messages that show [the woman] repeatedly asking for 'rough' sexual encounters involving requests to be 'choked out' and slapped in the face."
⚾MARINERS' SANTIAGO SUSPENDED 10 GAMES UNDER MLB'S FOREIGN SUBSTANCES CRACKDOWN: Seattle Mariners pitcher Hector Santiago was suspended for 10 days yesterday, two days after he was ejected from a game against the Chicago White Sox after umpires said he had a foreign substance in his glove. Santiago is the first player who's been disciplined under MLB's new crackdown on grip-enhancing foreign substances. Seattle manager Scott Servais insisted yesterday that the substance on Santiago's glove was just rosin, saying, "It was rosin and rosin is behind the pitcher’s mound, so it’s not foreign."
🏒McDAVID WINS NHL'S MVP AWARD: The Edmonton Oilers' Connor McDavid won the NHL's MVP award, the Hart Trophy, yesterday (June 29th), becoming just the second unanimous selection, along with Wayne Gretzky in 1982. McDavid got all 100 first-place votes from members of the Professional Hockey Writers’ Association for his second MVP, after also winning in 2017. The 24-year-old also won the Ted Lindsay Award as the most outstanding player, an honor that's voted on by the NHL players. Also yesterday, the Minnesota Wild's Kirill Kaprizov won the Calder Memorial Trophy as rookie of the year.
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