VOTE: Help us choose the best KXAN viewer photo of March 2023

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:41:32 GMT

VOTE: Help us choose the best KXAN viewer photo of March 2023 AUSTIN (KXAN) — Here at KXAN, we get hundreds of photos sent to us each month by viewers just like you.We want to showcase some of the best pictures we receive, so we narrowed them down to our 10 favorites for the month. March's picks inevitably feature lots of bluebonnets, as well as photos of the incredible lightning Austin saw in the middle of the month.Help us choose the best viewer photo of March 2023. Look through the 10 pictures below, then vote for your favorite. The winning photo will move on to represent March in the best viewer photos of the year competition once 2023 is said and done.If you’d like to submit a photo for March’s competition, email it to [email protected]. Be on the lookout as KXAN may contact you to send a permission form so we can use your photo on air and online.Here are the options for March, in no particular order.Lightning ShowDripping Springs, March 17.Lightning over Dripping Springs on March 17, 2023. (KXAN Viewer Photo)Texas ThistleSun City, M...

A nice start to April

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:41:32 GMT

A nice start to April AUSTIN (KXAN) -- The last day of March featured a record high tied at Camp Mabry. The high of 90° equaled the record first set in 1946 and tied in 1974. There will be no record today though afternoon highs will be above normal.Highs this afternoon at or above normal (78°) UPDATED April forecast increases chances for rain Today will be dry. A sunny to partly cloudy sky this morning is followed by increasing clouds especially during the late afternoon. The weather will cooperate for the 95th ABC Kite Fest at Zilker Park. The wind will come out of the north to northeast 5 to 10+ mph. Come fly your kite today at Zilker ParkTomorrow, an upper-level disturbance will push the West Texas dry line towards the Hill Country. There will be a low chance of showers/ isolated thunderstorms in the afternoon. Most areas won't measure much more than a few hundredths of an inch. Record heat will be back in the forecast early next week with highs forecast for the low 90s. The record high for April 3 ...

High winds cause power outages across the St. Louis area

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:41:32 GMT

High winds cause power outages across the St. Louis area ST. LOUIS -- A lot of people might be waking up without power after high winds swept through the area. Ameren is reporting thousands of customers in both Missouri and Illinois have no electricity.Over a thousand homes in Madison County, Illinois lost power. In Missouri, Ameren is reporting hundreds of outages from St. Charles County down to Jefferson County.Ameren is currently working to restore the power. They had crews ready to work on the issue because of the windy forecast. You can check Ameren's outage map here.

I-70 crash kills one person in St. Louis

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:41:32 GMT

I-70 crash kills one person in St. Louis ST. LOUIS -- One person is dead after a crash involving several cars on eastbound I-70 and Grand Avenue. The collision happened around 2 a.m. Saturday. Accident reconstruction has been requested to investigate the cause of the crash.This is a developing story. We will post more details here as they come into the FOX 2 newsroom.

Police search for woman after two shot in St. Louis

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:41:32 GMT

Police search for woman after two shot in St. Louis ST. LOUIS -- Police are looking for a woman accused of shooting a man in the face and a woman in her head. This happened after midnight on Semple Avenue near the Kingsway West neighborhood. Both victims were conscious and breathing when first-responders got there.Police say the suspect took off in a gray Ford Focus, and that she knows the victims. Call police if you have any information. You can also call Crime Stoppers at 1-866-371-8477. You may remain anonymous and could be eligible for a reward.

Hail pelts cars in St. Clair County

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:41:32 GMT

Hail pelts cars in St. Clair County ST. CLAIR COUNTY, Ill. -- People didn't get hit as hard by the storms in St. Clair County, but they did see some heavy hail. Nickle to quarter-sized hail pelted Belleville Friday afternoon. So far, there are no reports of any widespread damage in the county. Call 911 to report any downed power lines.

Analysis: How these seven top Denver mayoral candidates could make the runoff

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:41:32 GMT

Analysis: How these seven top Denver mayoral candidates could make the runoff Just days before Denver’s mayoral election, not much is clearer than it was a month ago.Millions of dollars have been spent by the campaigns and their outside supporters. Dozens of forums and debates have given the 16 active contenders a chance to differentiate themselves. They’ve touted loads of endorsements.Yet as the first-round election approaches on Tuesday, no clear frontrunners have emerged to leave the rest of the field in their dust. Undecided voters still seem to make up the largest bloc, as evidenced by the glacial pace of ballot returns. Less than 14% of mail ballots had been returned as of Friday, according to the Denver Elections Division.“People are looking for a standout candidate, and they’re looking for a reason to vote,” said James Mejía, a Denver civic leader, former city official and mayoral candidate in 2011. “This one has thrown people for a loop. It’s unprecedented in Denver history in so many ways.”The large field, a function of both ...

Colorado to advance $1.4 million to cash-strapped Western Slope hospital

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:41:32 GMT

Colorado to advance $1.4 million to cash-strapped Western Slope hospital A Delta County hospital that said Medicare loans drained its cash will get more than $1.4 million in advance payments from the state, but it’s not clear if that will be enough to stabilize it.Board members of Delta Health, which owns Delta County Memorial Hospital and clinics on the Western Slope, on Monday said they had recently discovered almost all of their cash on hand was committed to paying off debts — meaning they had money in the bank, but couldn’t use it.Board chair Jean Ceriani said Delta Health would be able to make payroll the next time checks were due, but would be seeking help to get through the cash crunch.The hospital had been losing money for years, but Ceriani blamed the immediate crisis on the need to repay $11 million in advances from Medicare late last year.The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services had essentially loaned hospitals some of their expected future payments to get them through the worst points of the pandemic, but when ...

Where did all your Zoom friends go?

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:41:32 GMT

Where did all your Zoom friends go? One day last year, Julie Gauthier went on Twitter with a confession to make. “Unpopular opinion: I don’t have zoom fatigue and I miss zoom happy hours and game nights,” she wrote. “I feel more isolated now than I did when friends all took time to chat online at the beginning of the pandemic.”Gauthier, 30, had been scrolling through old photos and found a screenshot of one of the virtual happy hours she’d had with friends in the early days of COVID restrictions. At the time, living alone and working remotely as a software engineer in rural Coventry, Connecticut, the self-described extrovert seized every opportunity for human contact she could get.Virtual trivia nights? She was in. Mask-making over Zoom with members of a local maker space? Why not? She made a new best friend out of a stranger she met at an online meetup for tech workers, and when another friend’s band began broadcasting porch concerts over Facebook Live, Gauthier streamed the show on her TV and got all dressed up as i...

Who will take care of Italy’s older people? Robots, maybe.

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 03:41:32 GMT

Who will take care of Italy’s older people? Robots, maybe. CARPI, Italy — The older woman asked to hear a story.“An excellent choice,” answered the small robot, reclined like a nonchalant professor atop the classroom’s desk, instructing her to listen closely.She leaned in, her wizened forehead almost touching the smooth plastic head.“Once upon a time,” the robot began a brief tale, and when it finished asked her what job the protagonist had.“Shepherd,” Bona Poli, 85, responded meekly.The robot didn’t hear so well. She rose out of her chair and raised her voice.“Shep-herd!” she shouted.“Fantastic,” the robot said, gesticulating awkwardly. “You have a memory like a steel cage.”The scene may have the dystopian “what could go wrong?” undertones of science fiction at a moment when both the promise and perils of artificial intelligence are coming into sharper focus. But for the exhausted caregivers at a recent meeting in Carpi, a handsome town in Italy’s most innovative region for elder care, it pointed to a welcome, not-too-distant future ...