Weekend Chaos: Downtown St. Louis fights & shootings

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:10:51 GMT

Weekend Chaos: Downtown St. Louis fights & shootings ST. LOUIS - It was another weekend of craziness in downtown St. Louis with fights and gunshots during the overnight hours. The latest episodes involved two incidents early Sunday morning. Police shared that the suspects in both cases are still at large.The first incident unfolded around 1:15 a.m. Police responded to a call for a large fight in the street with several suspects having guns in the 900 block of Locust Avenue. Officers broke up the crowd without incident, but then about 20 minutes later officers were sent to the same location for antoher street fight. Officers again dispersed the crowd, but this time they heard a barrage of gunfire nearby on the 300 block of Olive Boulevard.We're told officers ran there and found multiple people in two vehicle. Both vehicle were riddled with bullets. Police toold FOX that nine people were in the vehicles, and eight were teenagers. Several shell casings were found, but nobody was hit or injured. Close Thanks for sign...

Heavy rain floods St. Louis area interstates and homes

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:10:51 GMT

Heavy rain floods St. Louis area interstates and homes ST. LOUIS COUNTY, Mo. - Heavy rain pounded parts of south St. Louis City and County Sunday, caused flash floods on roads and in homes.MoDOT closed Interstate-55 at Carondelet for much of the night Sunday night. The heavy rains sent the River Des Peres spilling over its banks. I-55 was also closed at Reavis Barracks, as Gravois Creek flooded the highway at Union Road. Traffic was backed up for miles, but the roads re-opened by 9:00 p.m. Mother’s Day storms result in stranded vehicles, drivers across metro St. Louis Cars were trapped in floodwaters all over St. Louis City and County Sunday night. In south St. Louis, several cars were stuck or stalled after trying to pass through a low-lying underpass.Photos were sent to FOX 2 from a viewer in south county on Brook Avenue near Jefferson Barracks Park. Water could be seen up over the wheel wells on cars stranded in the street. There was also a flash flooding in a neighborhood on Tesson Court. Th...

Maryville University teams up with Stan The Man Inc. to create scholarship

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:10:51 GMT

Maryville University teams up with Stan The Man Inc. to create scholarship ST. LOUIS - Some college athletes can get a break on tuition, courtesy of Stan Musial.Maryville University and Stan the Man Inc. have announced a new sports scholarship. It's available to undergraduate student athletes enrolled in any program at Maryville. Trending Stories: Low or no water pressure reported in Dogtown The scholarships will be awarded annually to two students who demonstrate good sportsmanship, embody character, and have a strong commitment to their community.Applications for the scholarship will be open soon.

Sterling K. Brown & Dr. Anthony Fauci to speak at Washington University commencement today

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:10:51 GMT

Sterling K. Brown & Dr. Anthony Fauci to speak at Washington University commencement today ST. LOUIS - Washington University is awarding five honorary degrees Monday during its commencement ceremony.Among the recipients are Sterling K. Brown. The St. Louis native is an award-winning actor and producer. He will deliver the commencement address. Trending Stories: Low or no water pressure reported in Dogtown Infectious diseases expert doctor Anthony Fauci will also be awarded an honorary degree Dr. Fauci will address graduating students at the school of medicine's ceremony Monday afternoon.

Repelled by high car prices, Americans are holding on to their vehicles longer than ever

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:10:51 GMT

Repelled by high car prices, Americans are holding on to their vehicles longer than ever By TOM KRISHER (AP Auto Writer)ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — With new and used cars still painfully expensive, Ryan Holdsworth says he plans to keep his 9-year-old Chevy Cruze for at least four more years. Limiting his car payments and his overall debt is a bigger priority for him than having a new vehicle.A 35-year-old grocery store worker from Grand Rapids, Michigan, Holdsworth would probably be in the market for a vehicle within a few years — if not for the high cost. For now, it’s out of the question.“You’re not going to get one for a price you can afford,” he said.Holdsworth has plenty of company. Americans are keeping their cars longer than ever. The average age of a passenger vehicle on the road hit a record 12.5 years this year, according to data gathered by S&P Global Mobility. Sedans like Holdsworth’s are even older, on average — 13.6 years.Blame it mainly on the pandemic, which in 2020 triggered a global shortage of automotiv...

Cannabis home-growing 101: How to cultivate clones, seeds in Colorado

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:10:51 GMT

Cannabis home-growing 101: How to cultivate clones, seeds in Colorado By now, Colorado gardeners are hard at work preparing their soil and remediating their snow-sick lawns in hopes of procuring a bountiful harvest later this year. For those who are still undecided on exactly what to plant, may I suggest adding a different kind of herb to your garden: cannabis.When Colorado legalized recreational marijuana in 2012, it also legalized home-growing. According to state law, any person age 21 or older is allowed to grow up to six plants at a time in an enclosed area at a private residence. Local laws may have stricter stipulations — for example, the city of Denver limits home-growing to 12 plants total regardless of how many people live at one location — but, in general, it’s permissible to cultivate your own stash.And because weed plants grow like, well, weeds, the process is also fairly simple. According to experts, anyone with a green thumb can be successful at growing cannabis.“Think about how you would grow a tomato plant. Make sure it’s got enough sp...

The schools that take Colorado’s “most vulnerable” students are disappearing. Can they be saved? Should they?

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:10:51 GMT

The schools that take Colorado’s “most vulnerable” students are disappearing. Can they be saved? Should they? Erin Schneiderman used to get calls in the middle of the day two or three times a week to pick her son up from his Denver elementary school.Last Resort“Last Resort” is a Colorado News Collaborative-led four-part investigation by Chalkbeat Colorado, The Colorado Sun, and KFF Health News into the collapsing system of schools that serve some of Colorado’s most vulnerable students.Read the full series at colabnews.co.The third-grader had run away or was standing in the hallway screaming. Meltdowns could last for hours. School was just too loud and crowded, with too much unpredictability, for a child with autism who craved routine.Denver Public Schools decided Schneiderman’s son should go to a privately run school that specializes in serving children with intense behavioral, mental health or special education needs. But when it came time to start fourth grade, he still didn’t have a spot. The boy spent two months at home, most of that time getting no education at all.Today, nearly five y...

The greatest wealth transfer in history is here, with familiar (rich) winners

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:10:51 GMT

The greatest wealth transfer in history is here, with familiar (rich) winners By Talmon Joseph Smith and Karl Russell, The New York TimesAn intergenerational transfer of wealth is in motion in America — and it will dwarf any of the past.Of the 73 million baby boomers, the youngest are turning 60. The oldest boomers are nearing 80. Born in midcentury as U.S. birthrates surged in tandem with an enormous leap in prosperity after the Depression and World War II, boomers are now beginning to die in larger numbers, along with Americans older than 80.Most will leave behind thousands of dollars, a home or not much at all. Others are leaving their heirs hundreds of thousands, or millions, or billions of dollars in various assets.In 1989, total family wealth in the United States was about $38 trillion, adjusted for inflation. By 2022, that wealth had more than tripled, reaching $140 trillion. Of the $84 trillion projected to be passed down from older Americans to millennial and Generation X heirs through 2045, $16 trillion will be transferred within the next deca...

Hundreds of migrants are arriving in Denver, again stretching city resources. What’s the long-term plan?

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:10:51 GMT

Hundreds of migrants are arriving in Denver, again stretching city resources. What’s the long-term plan? When gunfire erupted in front of his uncle’s business in Venezuela, it was the last straw for Jeremy Jimenez. He decided to make the long and dangerous trek to the United States.Jimenez, 22, set out alone, but eventually made friends with others who were fleeing violence. After months of journeying through treacherous conditions in multiple countries, he made it to El Paso, Texas. There, he was told he could get a bus ticket to Denver before ultimately making his way to Chicago, where a friend of his lives.And that’s what he did. Among a crowd of people getting food Tuesday at the migrant processing center on Denver’s Auraria Campus, Jimenez said he wants people to know he’s been treated well and welcomed in Denver. He wants to remain in the U.S. and work.But for now, “I’m just taking it day by day” and making “small plans,” he said in Spanish. “If you have (too many) plans, it can be stressful and weigh you down.”As ...

Colorado wildflowers could be epic this year thanks to abundant snowpack, but other factors in play

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 22:10:51 GMT

Colorado wildflowers could be epic this year thanks to abundant snowpack, but other factors in play With Colorado’s snowpack ranging from ample to exceptional this spring, hikers who adore wildflowers may already be envisioning days of strolling along lush landscapes of spectacular blooms under columbine-blue skies when all that snow melts.It could well happen this summer. But because several factors affect the quality of wildflower seasons, and some of them have yet to play out, experts say it’s too soon to predict whether wildflower viewing will be good this year or great. It depends on what happens over the next few weeks.“The mountains are probably going to have a pretty good year,” said Thomas Bates, a plant ecologist for the Arapaho and Roosevelt national forests, which encompass the northern Front Range high country. “The critical time is not now, because there’s still snow. It’s that three to six weeks after the snow melts. We have ample moisture, but it does depend on how that moisture comes off — in the timing, and the rate.”Rosy...