Almost half the U.S. is under winter weather alerts, as a storm dumps the heaviest snow in more than 10 years in some areas. (Source: CNN, KCTV, WHIO)
grants for women
Community Foundation of Johnson County offers new grant for small businesses.
Republican Mike Johnson narrowly won reelection Friday as House speaker on a first ballot, overcoming hard-right GOP holdouts in a tense standoff and buoyed by a nod of support from President-elect Donald Trump. The uneasy scene brought an ominous start to the first day of the new Congress. A small collection of hardline Republicans convened in the back of the House chamber, one by one declining to vote or choosing another lawmaker. Johnsons face turned grim, acknowledging fresh turmoil and signaling trouble ahead for him as Trump returns to the White House with unified GOP control of Washington. In the end, however, Johnson was able to flip two holdouts who switched to support him, with help from Trump, who called the dissenting Republican lawmakers from the golf course. The final tally was 218-215. Professor Grant Reeher with Syracuse University joined LiveNOW from FOX to discuss.
Waiting for the New Year to start chasing business objectives is a costly mistake writes accountability coach Grant Difford.
The owner of a BBQ restaurant in Tecumseh says he has greatly benefited from a grant program in Michigan that aims to support small businesses and grow downtowns.
In one of its last major actions on climate, the Biden administration on Wednesday finalized a key waiver allowing California to set its own vehicle pollution controls effectively allowing the nation’s most populous state to implement its 2035 ban on selling new gasoline cars.File video from 2022 above: Gov. Newsom signs climate laws to dramatically cut California’s use of oil and gasThe Biden EPA also granted a separate waiver allowing California air regulators to significantly cut emissions of polluting nitrogen oxides from heavy trucks and off-road vehicles.”California has longstanding authority to request waivers from EPA to protect its residents from dangerous air pollution coming from mobile sources like cars and trucks,” said EPA administrator Michael Regan in a statement. “Today’s actions follow through on EPA’s commitment to partner with states to reduce emissions and act on the threat of climate change.”For decades, federal law has granted California the authority to set its own vehicle emissions standards. President-elect Donald Trump revoked that authority during his first administration in 2019, but President Joe Biden reinstated it in 2022.Later that year, California air regulators voted to phase out sales of new gas vehicles by 2035, the first regulation of its kind in the U.S.The California regulations have interim standards as well: Starting with 2026 models, 35% of new cars, SUVs and small pickups sold in California will be required to be zero-emission vehicles. That quota will increase each year and is expected to reach 51% of all new car sales in 2028, 68% in 2030 and 100% in 2035. The quotas will also allow 20% of zero-emission cars sold to be plug-in hybrids.California’s vehicle regulations matter a great deal to the auto industry because close to 20 other states and the District of Columbia have adopted them.Yet electric vehicle advocates widely expect Trump to revoke California’s authority once he takes office in January as part of a broader rollback of Biden’s climate and pollution policies. Trump has repeatedly promised to overturn regulations to expand EVs and fuel-efficient hybrids when he takes office.Some climate advocates remain hopeful California’s rules will still set an important example.”Even with the first Trump administration revoking that waiver, California was able to continue driving progress in the transport sector, coming to agreements with companies that saw the writing on the wall,” said Lena Moffitt, executive director for clean energy advocacy group Evergreen Action.The EPA is reviewing several other waivers California has in front of the agency, and is expected to make a decision on them before Biden’s term ends.The Supreme Court declined earlier this week to take up an appeal from conservative states challenging California’s ability to establish its strict vehicle emission rules.The move, which effectively leaves in place a lower court ruling upholding those regulations, comes days after the court agreed to hear a narrow slice of the fight: whether fuel companies have standing to sue over the regulations.”We hope SCOTUS upholds decades of sound legal precedent, but even if they don’t, the momentum is on the side of electrification,” Moffitt said. “There will be years of litigation that once again will provide backdrop for California trying to push for progress in every way they can.”A busy week for climate actions from BidenThe Biden administration is also out with a detailed report warning that “unfettered” development of terminals to ship liquified natural gas (LNG) overseas could raise energy prices for American consumers and add billions of tons of pollution to the atmosphere in the coming decades.If the U.S. increases LNG exports beyond what’s currently authorized, the resulting emissions would amount to an additional roughly 1.5 gigatons of planet-warming pollution per year by 2050, or a quarter of annual U.S. greenhouse gas pollution, according to the report published Tuesday.The Biden administration used the months of work on the study to justify a pause on new federal approvals for LNG terminals in January.There will be a 60-day comment period on the report, which will bleed into the incoming Trump administration.”The final decision is in the hands of the next administration,” Energy Sec. Jennifer Granholm told reporters. “We hope they’ll take these facts into account to determine whether additional LNG exports are truly in the best interest of the American people and the economy.”Granholm said the study found the U.S. government has already approved enough LNG export terminals that could ship enough natural gas “to meet global demand for decades to come.””The main takeaway is that a business-as-usual approach is neither sustainable nor advisable,” Granholm said. “With additional unfettered exports, wholesale domestic natural gas prices would increase by over 30% and the average American household will pay more than an extra $100 annually on their gas bills and their electric bills will likely go up as well.”Energy Department officials said the Biden administration study can’t be altered, but the Trump administration could release their own version in the months ahead.The LNG industry is advocating for this and also urging the Trump administration to take its time with a new study, rather than rushing to approve new export terminals on day one.A rush to approve could hurt export terminals’ chances in the courts, where environmental groups will challenge them.”We would obviously like to see our permits upheld in court challenges,” said Charlie Riedl, executive director for the Center for LNG, a trade group.
SPOKANE, Wash. Six downtown Spokane businesses are set to receive more than $26,000 in grant funds, thanks to the Downtown Spokane Partnership and BECU Philanthropy. The Small Business Faade Enhancement Grant Program, launched earlier this year, aims to improve the appearance and functionality of business entrances and building faades. The upgrades are expected to
Vice President-elect JD Vance on Friday surveyed damage from Hurricane Helene and talked to first responders in western North Carolina in one of his first public appearances since the November election.The hurricane struck in late September and caused at least $53 billion in damage in North Carolina, according to a state government estimate. More than 100 North Carolina residents died from the storm, which the state estimates damaged over 120,000 homes, at least 6,000 miles (9,700 kilometers) of roads and over 160 sewer and water systems.The incoming vice president and his wife, Usha, visited the Fairview Volunteer Fire Department, where he learned that the building flooded with 4 to 6 inches of water and that roughly a dozen people got walking pneumonia as they responded to the hurricane’s destruction. Power outages meant that some first responders could not talk with their own families for several days.At the height of it, I imagine yall were working nonstop, Vance said as he listened to a presentation.By going to the Asheville area, Vance ventured into Democratic territory. More than 60% of voters in Buncombe County backed Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee, in November’s presidential election. Liberal-leaning Asheville is known for its vibrant arts scene and the Biltmore Estate tourist attraction. The citys arts district faced substantial damage from Helene.But the majority of North Carolina voters supported President-elect Donald Trump, and he generally fared better among voters hurt by Hurricane Helene. The Republican gave a blistering critique of the Biden administration’s relief efforts, which President Joe Biden characterized as unAmerican misinformation.AP VoteCast, an extensive survey of the electorate, found that 26% of North Carolina voters said the hurricane affected their lives by damaging their homes, causing extended power outages or interfering with their ability to cast a ballot. Trump won 53% of those voters.Vance has largely stayed out of the public eye since the election aside from shepherding Trump’s Cabinet nominees around Capitol Hill.State lawmakers have already allocated more than $900 million in disaster relief, but North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper has sought at least $3.9 billion. The Democratic governor and other state leaders have now asked the federal government for $25 billion in aid.Hundreds of miles of roads have been reopened and water systems are back online, but the work has been slow-going. More than 100,000 western North Carolina residents were told just two weeks ago that they could once again use water coming out of Ashevilles water system to bathe and to drink from the faucet. A destroyed water system in at least one isolated county could take years to rebuild.Many Republicans and residents were critical of the initial recovery operations by the federal government and Coopers administration. Housing for displaced residents for the winter has become a concern, and some allies of Cooper have blamed GOP lawmakers for failing to provide grants to small businesses at risk of failing and housing renters faced with eviction.
The program through Coastal Enterprises Inc. offers free classes thanks to a grant from the governor’s energy office.
A light dusting of snow began covering the Buffalo Bills’ facility on Friday as the team completed its final practice of the week inside Highmark Stadium.With a lake-effect storm advisory already in place, this was perhaps a small glimpse of what the conditions might resemble come Sunday night, when the AFC East-leading Bills host the San Francisco 49ers. The latest forecast calls for 20 to 30 inches of snow to fall over a 12-to-16-hour period starting late Saturday afternoon.Video above: Dream come true Make-A-Wish grants Waukee boy’s wish to meet Brock PurdyRookie receiver Keon Coleman shrugged by saying he was accustomed to playing in snow during his two seasons at Michigan State.It certainly snows in landlocked East Lansing, but not to the degree of the storms that can hit the Buffalo region blowing in off nearby Lake Erie.”This is going to be concerning for people trying to travel to the football game. We do not expect the game to be postponed or anything like that. The game will go on,” Erie County executive Mark Poloncarz said at a news conference. “Now, we’ve had games that are colder than that. Just got to dress appropriately. So people need to be prepared. It’s the first real cold of the season. We haven’t had anything like this all year.”Plows and backhoes were already arriving at the stadium Friday, with a dump truck spreading salt on parking lots and roads in anticipation of the storm. The Bills issued a call for volunteers to sign up as prospective snow shovelers, with no indication on if or when they’ll be needed.This is nothing new for the Buffalo region or the Bills.In January, a lake-effect storm forced the NFL to push back the Bills’ wild-card playoff home game against Pittsburgh by a day. The switch was required because the brunt of the storm lasted through the scheduled game time, and an accompanying driving ban made it impossible to clear the stadium in time for kickoff.Two years ago, the Bills’ scheduled home game against Cleveland in November was instead played in Detroit because of a lake-effect storm.”We’re trying to stay on top of it,” coach Sean McDermott said Friday.”You guys know things change around here quickly with the weather coming off the lake and everything. So do the best we can,” he added, noting the uncertainty of the weather adds an extra layer of preparation.The Bills are 9-2, their best start since 1992, and with a win would clinch their fifth straight AFC East title. Associated Press writer Carolyn Thompson in Buffalo contributed to this report.
At a Senate Appropriations Committee hearing on Tuesday, Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) pressed federal officials on the recovery efforts on Maui and called for additional federal funding.
The Foundation for the Carolinas awards millions of dollars in grants to diverse small businesses across the city.