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After Trump’s election, Biden moved to limit oil drilling in Arctic Refuge [Video]

Hours after former President Donald Trump was declared the winner of the 2024 election, the Biden administration moved Wednesday to limit oil drilling in Alaskas Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.Related video above: Trump begins transition as Biden pledges cooperationOil drilling had been banned for decades in the Arctic refuge a pristine natural region in northeast Alaska home to a wide range of threatened species. But a law passed during the first Trump administration required the federal government to hold two lease sales there for fossil fuel drilling. The first was in 2021 and was ultimately suspended and canceled by the Interior Department because of the lack of interest from the oil industry.The Trump-era law required the second lease sale to be held before the end of 2024. The Biden administration signaled Wednesday it plans to move forward with a 400,000-acre auction the lowest acreage it could legally offer.Its one of the many ways the White House and administration are trying to protect some of Bidens biggest accomplishments while president, including his vast portfolio of action on climate change and the environment.ANWRs oil reserves are often mentioned by Trump in campaign rallies, as the president-elect has talked about opening parts of Alaska to oil drilling, or liquid gold, as Trump frequently calls it. Although President Joe Biden approved the major new Willow oil drilling project on Alaskas North Slope, his administration has also put in protections for a vast amount of Alaskan wilderness trying to limit drilling in other regions.Wednesdays move generated mixed feelings.Todays action by the Biden administration better protects the Arctic Refuge, and for that, we are grateful, said Kristen Miller, executive director of Alaska Wilderness League. The fight to save the Arctic Refuge is back, and we are ready for the next four years.But some Alaska Native groups said the move would hurt the local economy, which is highly dependent on revenue from drilling.It seems that once again the people of the North Slope are being told that our voices and lived experience are insufficient, and that federal laws passed by Congress mean little in the eyes of the Biden administrations Department of the Interior, North Slope Borough Mayor Josiah Patkotak said in a statement.

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2024 will be the first year on record to smash a warming limit scientists warned about [Video]

New data confirms 2024 will be the hottest year on record and the first calendar year to exceed the Paris Agreement threshold devastating news for the planet that comes as America chooses a president who has promised to undo its climate progress both at home and abroad.Related video above: Bill Nye discusses the role climate change plays in forming major hurricanesNearly all the worlds countries pledged to strive to keep global warming under 1.5 degrees Celsius in the Paris Agreement, which scientists said would prevent cascading and worsening impacts such as droughts, heat waves, and catastrophic sea level rise. They warn at that level, the human-caused climate crisis fueled by heat-trapping fossil fuel pollution begins to exceed the ability of humans and the natural world to adapt.Data released Wednesday by Europes Copernicus Climate Change Service shows 2024 is virtually certain to shoot above that threshold.President-elect Donald Trump, a noted climate denier, pulled the U.S. out of the Paris Agreement during his first term and vowed to do it again in his second term. However, the new data makes it clear that further delays in climate action from leading global economies will ensure even higher levels of warming are reached and, with it, ever-worsening impacts.We dont have time to stop, Alex Scott, a climate diplomacy strategist at international think tank ECCO, said Wednesday.As climate change-fueled extreme weather is killing more people and costing economies billions of dollars each year, the climate crisis has been given top billing at major international forums like the G7 and G20.These are things that a Trump administration will not be able to shy away from, Scott said.Not only did President-elect Trump vow to pull the U.S. out of the landmark Paris climate agreement on the campaign trail, but some former Trump officials have floated the idea of pulling the country entirely out of the United Nations treaty to tackle climate change. Doing so would end U.S. participation in international negotiations and make it harder for future administrations to re-enter them.It would be a more serious and dramatic step, said Alden Meyer, senior associate at climate think tank E3G and a longtime international climate expert.Trumps re-election will likely cast a shadow over COP29, the United Nations-backed international climate talks, which kick off Monday in Baku, Azerbaijan. The summit is focused on ramping up finance to tackle the climate crisis.According to Meyer, “Global climate negotiations are facing another whiplash moment as Americans seesaw between presidential extremes.The U.S. has done this before, and the world has gotten kind of tired of this routine, Meyer said. On the other hand, the U.S. is a major player on the scene, and I think other countries would want to maintain the ability to try to re-engage it down the road.Meyer and other experts said major emitting countries like China and the European Union would have to step up in the absence of U.S. climate leadership on the world stage but added there are concerns other nations will use Trumps anti-climate stance as an excuse to weaken their climate ambitions.In the meantime, global temperatures are climbing. Last month was the second-warmest October, according to Copernicus, and was 1.65 degrees Celsius warmer than pre-industrial levels, when humans began generating fossil fuel pollution.Extreme weather struck in many places during the month, including Hurricane Milton striking Florida and devastating flash flooding in Spain that killed more than 200 people. Another alarming climate milestone during the month included a lack of snow atop Mt. Fuji in Japan for the first time in 130 years of record keeping.

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APD officer shot in the arm ‘likely’ from friendly fire [Video]

NOT ON THE AIR. ON THE KOAT APP. AN ALBUQUERQUE POLICE OFFICER IS AT HOME RECOVERING AFTER TAKING FRIENDLY FIRE IN A DEADLY SHOOTING. POLICE CHIEF HAROLD MEDINA ADDRESSED THE SHOOTING ALMOST THREE WEEKS AFTER IT HAPPENED. OUR REPORTER, CORY HOWARD JOINS US NOW WITH HIS DETAILS. YEAH, DOUG AND CHARLENE, THEY POLICE SAY THAT IT ALL STARTED WITH AN ENCOUNTER ON A DOMESTIC VIOLENCE CALL. AND WHEN THEY ENCOUNTERED A MAN WITH A GUN, THATS WHEN THEY SAY THINGS TOOK A TURN FOR THE WORSE. THE ALBUQUERQUE POLICE DEPARTMENT, FOR THOSE IN THE TRAILER, YOU NEED TO COME OUT WITH YOUR HANDS FREE AND CLEAR. BODY CAM FOOTAGE SHOWS THREE OFFICERS BEING APPROACHED BY AN ARMED SUSPECT, MATTHEW SANCHEZ. YOURE GOING TO BE I-40. DO NOT COME NEAR IT. OFFICERS SHOOTING SANCHEZ SEVEN TIMES, KILLING HIM. THEN YOU CAN ALSO NOTICE ONE OF THE OFFICERS DROPPED TO THE GROUND. WHAT DO YOU WANT? MY ARM. OKAY, WAIT, WAIT. UPPER ARM. THE OFFICERS SHOT IN THE ARM, BUT POLICE FOUND SANCHEZS GUN IN THE LOCKBACK POSITION, MEANING IT WAS OUT OF BULLETS. SO SANCHEZ DIDNT HAVE BULLETS TO SHOOT THE OFFICER WHO DID. AND I THINK ONE OF THE OFFICERS MENTIONED IT IN THIS IN THEIR INTERVIEW IS OFFICER TORRES MENTIONS THAT SHE WAS IN FEAR THAT SHE WAS ABOUT TO GET STRUCK BY A BULLET AND STARTED TO TURN HER HEAD IN ANTICIPATION OF GETTING STRUCK. INVESTIGATORS SAY ITS A CASE OF FRIENDLY FIRE. THE INJURED OFFICER MOST LIKELY SHOT BY A FELLOW OFFICER BEHIND HIM. AN INDIVIDUAL COULD HAVE AN OPEN VIEW AT THE INDIVIDUAL. THEYRE TRYING TO ENGAGE AND MOVEMENT FROM ONE OF THE OTHER OFFICERS COULD HAVE BEEN A CONTRIBUTING FACTOR AS TO WHAT HAPPENED. NOW, THE DEPARTMENT SAYS THAT THEY WILL SPEND THE NEXT SEVERAL MONTHS ANALYZING AND INVESTIGATING THE VIDEO AND THEY CHIEF MEDINA DID SAY THAT IF IT IS DETERMINED ALL TO BE A MISTAKE, THEN HE WILL WELCOME BACK EVERY OFFICER WITH OPEN ARMS REPORTING IN ALBUQUERQUE, CORY HOWARD, KOAT ACTION SEVEN NEWS. AND TWO OF THE OFFICERS INVOLVED JOINED THE DEPARTMENT IN 2021. THAT OFFICER WHO WAS SENT TO BE SHOT JOINED THE FORCE IN 2023.

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Louisiana special tax session begins [Video]

Louisiana’s special session to overhaul the state’s tax system will begin Wednesday night. The session will begin at 3 p.m. and must end on Nov. 25 by 6 p.m. Gov. Jeff Landry is expected to deliver remarks at 3:45 p.m. Lawmakers will address 23 items during the session. This is the state’s third special session this year. Landry detailed his proposed tax plan during a news conference earlier this month with a focus on reducing the income tax and charging sales tax for more items and services. Louisiana is the latest state in the Deep South to discuss tax changes, as Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves continues to push for his state to phase out the income tax and as Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp signed measures earlier this year to significantly cut income taxes.Landry told WDSU’s Travers Mackel, “We’re bringing them in, and I think that it’s important and I think it’s the first tax plan to reflect the people and not special interest.”We, in this state, have been on the losing end of an economic game that other states are playing and beating us at today, Landry said. We offer an opportunity to change that playbook so Louisiana can start winning. According to information from the states revenue department, Louisiana residents currently pay a 4.25% tax rate on income $50,000 and above, 3.5% on income between $12,500 and $50,000, and 1.85% on income $12,500 and below. Landrys proposal would eliminate income tax for those making up to $12,500 and would set a flat income tax rate of 3% for those earning above $12,500.Landry touted the plan, saying it would provide an immediate increase in take-home pay for every Louisiana taxpayer. The governor said under that plan, he believes Louisiana will be on “the road to reducing or eliminating the income tax by 2030, an idea that has been pushed by other Republican officials including state Treasurer John Fleming and Revenue Secretary Richard Nelson.Currently, there are nine states that do not levy an individual income tax. Among those are the nearby states of Florida, Tennessee and Texas.Landry said that while his plan does not include increasing the current rate of sales tax, he does believe the tax should be expanded to include other items and services such as lobbying, dog grooming and car washes. Currently, there are 223 sales tax exemptions, Nelson said. So your taxation will be driven by more about what you choose to buy, rather than by your labor, Landry said. I think thats fair. I hate the income tax … a man and womans labor should never be owned by the government.While Landrys full list of proposals and additional details were not immediately available, he said other changes could include repealing the corporate income tax, eliminating the tax on prescription drugs, making the partial business utility exemption permanent and modernize our constitutional funds making the partial business utility exemption permanent, and modernize our constitutional funds and property tax exemptions to give our legislature more flexibility to meet budget shortfalls and future fiscal issues.Louisiana faces a looming estimated $700 million budget shortfall because of the expiration of some temporary sales taxes. Officials say the shortfall could result in budget cuts that threaten teacher pay, recent education reforms, higher education and health care infrastructure. Landry says that his tax plan would close out most of the shortfall. Additionally, he argues that it will make Louisiana more competitive with surrounding states that have seen substantial economic and population growth in recent years.This holistic plan is designed not only to address budget shortfalls, but to catapult Louisiana into the future with increased jobs and economic growth for years to come, he said.Landry said he plans on calling the GOP-dominated Legislature into a special session in November. If lawmakers pass any bills, final approval will be determined by voters in the March election.This will be Louisianas third special session held this year and since Landry took office in January. The legislature gathered in January to redraw congressional boundaries, which resulted in a second majority-Black district, and returned to the Capitol again in February to pass tough-on-crime policies.Also this year, the GOP-dominated Legislature held its regular three-month-long session, during which lawmakers pushed conservative priorities. Lawmakers couldnt vote on tax measures in this years regular session. The last time there were three special sessions in a year was 2018. During that time, the Louisiana Legislature spent more than $1.5 million on the sessions, which included the costs of supplies, extra hours for staff, additional employees hired for the sessions, and per diem and mileage for lawmakers.