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Alabama and Auburn preview 2024 season at SEC media days [Video]

College basketball season is right around the corner. Both Alabama and Auburn are set for exhibition action this month, and the Tide and Tigers really started the year at SEC media days in Mountain Brook. These teams enter 2024 with high expectations, especially Alabama, which is No. 2 in the preseason AP poll and predicted to win the SEC in the preseason media poll. Led by returners Mark Sears, Latrell Wrightsell Jr. and Grant Nelson, head coach Nate Oats has a squad poised to improve on last year’s Final Four trip. This year’s team, though, isn’t focused on what happened last season.”I don’t really want to talk about that much with the team. I kind of told them we had the celebration Friday where we raised the banner and gave out the rings. The issue is eight out of our 13 scholarship guys weren’t here last year. So, and that was last year, it’s kind of old news. It’s great for the program, for the fans, for the university to be able to celebrate it, but it has nothing to do with what we’ve got going on this year,” Oats said. As for Auburn, the Tigers were picked to finish second in the SEC and are No. 11 in the preseason AP poll. Head coach Bruce Pearl has last year’s leading scorer back in Johni Broome, who was picked for preseason First Team All-SEC. Broome and the Tigers will be tested early in a schedule that features No. 4 Houston, No. 5 Iowa State and No. 7 Duke, among others. That schedule is just a product of what Pearl has built at Auburn and where this program looks to be. “You better be careful what you wish for, and we’ve got all that we can handle for sure, but it’s what we’ve built; it’s why we worked. It’s easier to get someplace than it is to stay someplace, so to try to stay competitive at Auburn has been a great, great challenge and we’ve managed to win four championships in the last seven years. Two regular season and two tournament with four different teams. Sometimes you got to act like you belong,” Pearl said. The Tide will take the floor for the first time this year in exhibition action against Wake Forest in Birmingham at Boutwell Auditorium. The regular season begins for Alabama on Nov. 4 at home against UNC Asheville. Auburn has its first exhibition game Oct. 27 in Greenville, South Carolina, against Furman. The Tigers’ first regular season game is Nov. 6 against Vermont at Neville Arena.

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Small Business Funding

Fuel shortage starting to subside in Florida as cleanup from Milton continues [Video]

Floridians are still picking up the pieces after Hurricane Milton struck last week, but fuel is slowly returning to the state after an initial shortage in the aftermath of the storm. CBS News national correspondent Dave Malkoff has more from Florida and CBS News Philadelphia meteorologist Grant Gilmore has a look at the forecast.

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Small Business Funding

Out-of-state nonprofit questions the distribution of funds for Lewiston shooting victims [Video]

An out-of-state nonprofit has raised concerns about whether some Lewiston shooting victims were overlooked by the organization responsible for distributing donations.During the aftermath of the mass shooting, people nationwide were eager to donate to the victims, so the Maine Community Foundation created the Lewiston-Auburn Area Response Fund to streamline the contributions. “Five weeks, six weeks … I tried to go back to work,” said Arthur Barnard, whose son Artie Strout was killed at Schemengee’s Bar & Grill. “I can remember getting up to go to work and making it to a parking lot a mile from my house. When I started work, I think I was in that parking lot for five hours.”While Barnard was struggling to return to work, the response fund paid his November rent. It kind of means a lot when you have three teenagers in the home and, you know, a baby and a mother and handicapped adult, and you’re working and taking care of all these people and going through everything,” said Barnard. The response fund raised over $6.6 million; $4.9 million was allocated to victims, family members and survivors, while $1.7 million went to community nonprofits. Donors were able to specify which group they wanted to support. The Uvalde Foundation for Kids claims to have heard from a handful of individuals who say they weren’t given substantial support following the shooting. “We are currently concerned about the original vetting process, deserving individuals being vetted out of the care process, and additional reports that some funding was allegedly rerouted to the Resiliency Center, which has yet served its full purpose to the community,” said Daniel Chapin, national director of the Uvalde Foundation for Kids. The group is an anti-gun violence group formed to help with victim advocacy following the Robb Elementary School shooting. In a press release, the Uvalde Foundation for Kids said it has relevant experience supporting victims of the Robb Elementary School shooting and wants to lend its expertise to stakeholders in Maine.”I did a fund in Uvalde,” said Jeff Dion, executive director of the Mass Violence Survivors Fund. “I’ve never worked with those people, and I can’t say anything about, to support their credibility. So, I just dont know. I dont even know what they have to do with this.”Dion helped establish the Lewiston-Auburn Area Response Fund. He says they used a rigorous vetting process to determine who would receive funding. The board of awarded grants to 162 individuals, all of whom were either present during the shooting or heir to one of the 18 people who were killed. He says this is the first time he’s heard claims that some victims were overlooked. “I thought the response in Maine, and the work of the Maine Community Foundation, was some of the best response that I’ve seen out of all the 31 incidents I’ve been involved in,” said Dion. Barnard believes everyone who needed support got it. While he appreciated the financial help, the money is the last of his concerns. I don’t know where else it could have gone,” said Barnard. “Little things. I mean, I just … what I do know is that I got to spend the last two hours of his life with him, and he was happy.”The Uvalde Foundation for Kids wasn’t able to connect 8 Investigates with any of the victims who claim to have been overlooked, citing holiday staffing. A spokesperson for the group didn’t respond to our request for an interview. The foundation has asked the Maine attorney general’s office to review its findings and provide oversight. The office hasn’t responded to our request for comment.