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Home Based Business

NYSP investigate over 200 leads in search for body of missing Plattsburgh man [Video]

Weeks after a North Country man was arrested for the murder of a missing Plattsburgh man, New York State Police are continuing to search for the victim’s remains after receiving hundreds of tips from the public.Police said they believe that 40-year-old Jahfari Joseph of Plattsburgh was killed on Dec. 29 at a home on Fuller Road in Peru. Several days after his death, police arrested 61-year-old Timothy Timmons of Plattsburgh and charged him with second-degree murder. NBC5 has continued to reach out to investigators to learn more about their progress in the case. On Tuesday, a state police spokesperson told our station that they continue to “aggressively search” for Joseph’s body. Since their investigation began, NYSP has investigated 225 leads and executed numerous search warrants while conducting interviews in their search for answers.”The State Police will continue to work vigorously until Joseph’s body is located,” the statement concludes.Earlier this month, Clinton County District Attorney Andrew Wylie said the property where Joseph was allegedly killed belongs to Timmons’ ex-wife, and that Joseph may have had a disagreement with someone in the Timmons family. Timmons is accused of murdering Joseph on the night of Dec. 29 and later lying to investigators about the incident. Police were able to make the arrest following witness statements and after gathering evidence from cell phone video and audio.Timmons pleaded not guilty to the charges and is being held until his next court appearance.Earlier this month, Wylie said that neither Joseph’s body nor the murder weapon have been recovered. Authorities said they believe the body was moved after the killing.NBC5 will continue to track the case and provide updates as they come into our newsroom.

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Home Based Business

They Did Not Want To Do The Work To Properly Protect This 2024 Toyota Says This ExpertThe Differences Between The Different Undercoats and What You Should Expect From Having Your Car Undercoated. [Video]

An example of a Toyota owner’s undercoating that the undercoating industry does not want you to see. Plus, what to look for after your car has been undercoated to ensure it was done right and what product is recommended.

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Home Based Business

Trump halts offshore wind projects [Video]

President Donald Trump signed an executive order Monday temporarily halting offshore wind lease sales in federal waters and pausing the issuance of approvals, permits and loans for both onshore and offshore wind projects.The interior secretary will review wind leasing and permitting practices for federal waters and lands. The assessment will consider the environmental impact of wind projects on wildlife, the economic costs associated with the intermittent generation of electricity and the effect of subsidies on the viability of the wind industry, the order states.Trump wants to increase drilling for oil and gas and has been hostile to renewable energy, particularly offshore wind. Trump’s pick for interior secretary, Doug Burgum, was asked during his confirmation hearing whether he would commit to continuing with offshore wind leases that have been issued. Burgum said projects that make sense and are already in law will continue.Wind power currently provides about 10% of the electricity generated in the United States, making it the nation’s largest source of renewable energy. There is 73 gigawatts of offshore wind capacity under development in the U.S., enough to power 30 million homes, according to the American Clean Power Association.The order also temporarily prohibits Magic Valley Energy from continuing to develop the Lava Ridge Wind Project in Idaho. The federal government approved a scaled-down plan for the wind farm in December over local opposition, including from groups concerned about its proximity to a historic site where Japanese Americans were incarcerated during World War II.On the campaign trail, Trump vowed to end the offshore wind industry as soon as he returned to the White House. He wants to boost production of fossil fuels such as oil, natural gas and coal, which cause climate change, in order for the U.S. to have the lowest-cost energy and electricity of any nation in the world, he says.It’s unclear how much authority he has to stop wind projects, particularly those that have their federal permits. His order will likely be challenged in court, much like an executive order President Joe Biden signed soon after taking office in 2021 that suspended new oil and gas lease sales was challenged.Soon after his election, Trump tasked a New Jersey congressman and vocal critic of offshore wind, Republican Rep. Jeff Van Drew, with drafting an executive order on offshore wind he could issue early in his term. Van Drew said he quickly sent the draft to Burgum. Van Drew views the executive order as a first step toward an eventual moratorium on offshore wind development.By including onshore wind projects too, Monday’s order is far broader than what Van Drew proposed. Trump says wind turbines are horrible, only work with subsidies and are many, many times more expensive than natural gas.Offshore wind is among the sources of new power generation that will cost the most, at about $100 per megawatt hour for new projects connecting to the grid in 2028, according to estimates from the Energy Information Administration. That includes tax credits under the Inflation Reduction Act, which reduces the cost of renewable technologies. But onshore wind is one of the cheapest sources, at about $31 on average for new projects.New natural gas plants are expected to produce electricity at nearly $43 per megawatt hour, according to the estimates. The EIA said in addition to price, its important to consider the reliability of the grid natural gas power plants can be operated at any time throughout the day, unlike solar or wind.Robin Shaffer, president of Protect Our Coast NJ, one of the most vocal groups opposing offshore wind on the East Coast, said the new executive order is only the first step toward the U.S. moving away from offshore wind, a harmful technology, and toward more promising, sustainable energy sources.But Kit Kennedy, managing director for power at the Natural Resources Defense Council, said the Trump administration is putting dirty fossil fuels front and center while delaying progress on renewable energy projects. This is not only bad for clean air, public health and national security, it cuts short a promising source of additional power at a time when the grid needs it most, Kennedy said in a statement.The Biden administration sought to ramp up offshore wind as a climate change solution, setting national goals to deploy offshore wind energy, holding lease sales and approving nearly a dozen commercial-scale offshore wind energy projects. The nations first commercial-scale offshore wind farm opened in March, a 12-turbine wind farm called South Fork Wind 35 miles east of Montauk Point, New York.

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Small Business Lifestyle

Judge Carole Smitherman reflects on her legacy ahead of her retirement [Video]

Judge Carole Smitherman is retiring from a decades-long historic career as a Jefferson County public servant. She said it is a bittersweet feeling as she reflects on her legacy. “It’s a fun place to work,” Smitherman said about her time on the bench. “And so, I’ve been here on and off for about 50 years, and that’s what I celebrate the longevity, the legacy, all the things that make me who I am.”At the forefront of who Smitherman is, is a dedicated public servant who has worn many hats in her hometown of Birmingham. >> YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD: Community coverage from WVTM 13She was the first Black woman hired as the deputy district attorney in Jefferson County and the first Black woman municipal and circuit court judge in Birmingham.”When I first started working here, I was the only Black person,” Smitherman said. “There were two of us in the legal system. And so I’ve watched it grow and mushroom. In being the first woman judge, Black woman of color, I’ve seen that changed dramatically.” In 2009, Smitherman who was the city council president at the time assumed the office of mayor after then-Mayor Larry Langford was convicted of bribery and related charges. That move made Smitherman the first and, so far, only Black woman to be mayor of Birmingham.”In those 60 or so days that I was there in that position, I learned a lot,” Smitherman said. “We put a lot of things in place, policies in place, and we were able to give the city the assurance that they needed that we would be OK.”Looking back, Smitherman said she wants people to remember the impact she’s had on her very own community. “That I was fair, that I was available, that I still worked in my community,” Smitherman said. “I still live in my community. And then I love my people, and that’s that’s what I want.”>> FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL: Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | YouTube In this next chapter, Smitherman said it will be filled with the things she cherishes the most: her family and her home. “Now, I just have more time for them,” Smitherman said. “More time for my husband. More time to work in my community. Because there is still a clarion call for me to keep talking and keep believing in people and having them to believe in the things that I say as being God-given and just the product of the times is it’s been a wonderful journey.”