April end bright, dry, and warm

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 12:50:03 GMT

April end bright, dry, and warm AUSTIN (KXAN) -- This final day of April dawned with sunshine and chilly air. Some lows in the Hill Country fell to the lower to middle 40s.Winds were light out of the southwest this morning with most wind speeds under 10 mph. This pales in comparison to the strong gusty winds out of the northwest to north Saturday with the following peak gusts:43 mph Taylor38 mph Burnet37 mph Austin-Bergstrom, Georgetown, La Grange, Pflugerville, and San Marcos.Gusty winds tonight RAIN TOTALS: See how much rain your neighborhood recorded Today will be sunny with highs well above the normal of 83°. Most maximum temperatures will peak in the upper half of the 80s to some low 90s in the Hill Country. Tomorrow will be warm, as well, although highs will be a few degrees lower due to clouds arriving late in the afternoon. Sunday will again be another dry day with the humidity dropping to the 20s this afternoon. It's short-lived, however, as southerly winds will return moisture from the Gulf. Humid ...

UnitedHealthcare says data attack may have impacted some Texas members

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 12:50:03 GMT

UnitedHealthcare says data attack may have impacted some Texas members AUSTIN (KXAN) — Insurance provider UnitedHealthcare said some Texans enrolled in its health plans may be impacted in a "credential stuffing attack" that happened in February. UnitedHealthcare said people affected will receive mailed notifications starting April 28. Personal information impacted could include members' names, health insurance ID numbers, dates of birth, addresses, dates of service, provider names, claim information and group name/number. RELATED: ARA no longer in-network with UnitedHealthCare On Friday, the insurance company said suspicious activity was identified Feb. 22 on the UHC mobile app and believes the information was accessed between Feb. 19-25. The company said it determined April 10 that members' personal information may be impacted. The company said there was "no evidence that member login credentials used during the attack were accessed or obtained from any UnitedHealthcare system."UnitedHealthcare said it "took prompt action to investigate the matter,...

Cloudy and breezy Sunday, unseasonably cool Monday

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 12:50:03 GMT

Cloudy and breezy Sunday, unseasonably cool Monday ST. LOUIS - We will see some sunshine early Sunday, but clouds will increase by late morning into the afternoon. It will be quite windy Sunday and much cooler than Saturday, with temperature highs around or just shy of 60 degrees. A few spot showers are possible east of the river. St. Louis radar: See a map of current weather here Clouds gradually decrease overnight and winds ease a bit, but still breezy. Temps lows are expected to be in the lower half of the 40s. Monday will still be windy and unseasonably cool, but with more sunshine. Temps should be a few degrees higher than Sunday. Tuesday and Wednesday get better as the day are set for sunshine, and the temps in mid 60s Tuesday and around 70 on Wednesday. Rain chances increase Thursday and Friday.

Colorado’s child care gaps laid bare by pandemic with never-ending wait lists, exorbitant costs

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 12:50:03 GMT

Colorado’s child care gaps laid bare by pandemic with never-ending wait lists, exorbitant costs The coronavirus pandemic, with its economic and social upheavals, underlined the country’s gaps and inequities in wages, health care, housing, education and child care.But while some pandemic-related problems have eased or improved, the price and availability of child care continue to create strains for families in Colorado and across the country as they strive to gain back ground.At the same time, educators and advocates say the needs highlighted by the coronavirus pandemic have prompted states and the federal government to provide more funding for things like child care. They see more awareness about how the lack of options for children and families can reverberate through communities and the economy.Clear Creek County Commissioner George Marlin has seen the effects when families are forced to juggle making a living with taking care of their children. The county has teamed up with the school and recreation districts, nonprofits and residents to open a child care center in wh...

Denver airport makes Food & Wine’s list of top 10 U.S. airports with best restaurants

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 12:50:03 GMT

Denver airport makes Food & Wine’s list of top 10 U.S. airports with best restaurants Denver International Airport was recognized as “editor’s choice” in Food & Wine Magazine’s list of the 10 Best U.S. Airports for Food, as voted on by the magazine’s readers.“Given that the Food & Wine Classic in Aspen has been around for 40 years, F&W editors are intimately acquainted with the Denver International Airport,” editors said in a story published this month. “Even when there are delays (and there are delays), the airport’s dining outlets offer everything you could want from a travel-day meal, whether you need to cry over a burrito at Cantina Grill, grab some jerky from a stand-alone kiosk or reward yourself with a treat from Voodoo Doughnut.”The colorful Root Down restaurant on concourse C at Denver International Airport. (Denver Post file)The rankings are part of the magazine’s Global Tastemakers Awards.“Readers voted based on travel completed within the past three years, on categories includin...

Colorado’s ambitious plan to reform eating disorder treatment facilities rolled back

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 12:50:03 GMT

Colorado’s ambitious plan to reform eating disorder treatment facilities rolled back Amid a surge in eating disorder diagnoses in Colorado, budget-minded lawmakers stripped language from a bill Monday that would’ve more tightly regulated facilities that treat the disease, a change welcomed by some providers and lamented by advocates.“In my advocacy mind, that just goes to, OK, so we’re choosing not to regulate care because it’s going to cost us something,” said Vincent Atchity, the president and CEO of Mental Health Colorado. “And in the meantime, substandard or unmonitored care will continue.”As it was drafted, SB23-176 would’ve required eating disorder treatment providers be specifically regulated by the state Behavioral Health Administration, and it would’ve barred a series of practices that patients have described as traumatic and harmful, including nude weigh-ins and the overuse of restrictive treatment. The bill would’ve also required facilities to provide trauma-informed care and to respect and provide accommoda...

How will court’s rebuke of Berkeley’s natural-gas ban affect the national movement it began?

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 12:50:03 GMT

How will court’s rebuke of Berkeley’s natural-gas ban affect the national movement it began? When Berkeley became the first U.S. city to ban construction of new natural gas lines in 2019, it pioneered an approach to reducing carbon emissions and pollutants that has since spread around the Bay Area and across the country.Now Berkeley has become a pioneer of a different sort, as an April appellate court ruling against the city’s ban is imperiling similar restrictions on natural gas and challenging the growing national electrification movement.While Berkeley’s ordinance winds its way through the courts, laws like it are stuck in legal crosshairs — including municipal code amendments in Oakland, San Jose and San Francisco. Cities intent on restricting the use of natural gas may need to find a different approach, said Amy Turner, a senior fellow at the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia Law School.The controversy is rooted in surprising ground: The 1975 Energy Policy and Conservation Act, originally an oil-crisis-era attempt to regulate the nation’...

Me & My Car: ’57 Chevy 150 could easily become a show model

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 12:50:03 GMT

Me & My Car: ’57 Chevy 150 could easily become a show model The Big Three U.S. automakers, GM, Ford and Chrysler, had very good years from 1955 through ’57. All three companies brought out completely new vehicles that were beautifully styled.Related ArticlesLocal News | Me & My Car: ’47 Chevy in East Bay among first true postwar trucks Local News | Me & My Car: Bay Area owner loves his ’34 Ford pickup truck Local News | Me & My Car: New home may be sought for ’69 Mercedes in Contra Costa Chevrolet changed from an attractive, dependable family car, to a car desired not only by their existing customers, but by people who wanted more performance and style. The new 265-cubic-inch V8 engine that Chevy introduced was a big hit, but they also retained the dependable 235-ci straight-six-cylinder engine.When an automobile company wants to build a new model car, there are at least five groups of people involved. First, the designers plan the vehicle’s look. Next...

Can 49ers win Super Bowl with rookie kicker? Doug Brien recalls doing it

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 12:50:03 GMT

Can 49ers win Super Bowl with rookie kicker? Doug Brien recalls doing it SANTA CLARA — Last time the 49ers won the Super Bowl, they did so with a rookie kicker drafted in the third round.They’re trying that same recipe 29 years later.By drafting Michigan kicker Jake Moody in Friday’s third round, the 49ers made what general manager John Lynch called a “necessary” move.“That’s exciting. It can work,” Doug Brien, the 49ers’ kicker on that 1994 championship team, said Saturday in an exclusive phone interview with this news organization.Every year at draft time, Brien recalls the “shock and excitement and terror, altogether” of being drafted out of Cal with the 85th overall pick. He only learned of the 49ers’ actual call when awoken by his parents at their Danville home that April 1994 morning.Friday night, on pick No. 99, the Niners made their third-round move for Moody, Michigan’s all-time scoring leader.“This guy Jake has a great opportunity and I wish him the best of luck,” added Brien, 52, a  De La Salle High-Concord graduate and a Piedmont ...

Pérez beats Verstappen to win Azerbaijan Grand Prix

Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 12:50:03 GMT

Pérez beats Verstappen to win Azerbaijan Grand Prix BAKU, Azerbaijan (AP) — Sergio Pérez took advantage of a fortunately timed safety car to beat his teammate Max Verstappen to the win in the Azerbaijan Grand Prix on Sunday, adding it to the sprint he won the day before, as Red Bull kept up its winning start to 2023.Verstappen started second behind Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc but swept past him on the long start-finish straight at the end of lap 3, the first lap on which drivers were allowed to use the DRS overtake assist system on the rear wing.It was a copy of the pass Pérez made on Leclerc on his way to winning the sprint race Saturday. After Verstappen took the lead Sunday, Pérez needed only two more laps for his own similar pass on Leclerc to seize second, as Red Bull underlined its status as F1’s dominant team.Pérez benefited when an accident by Nyck de Vries brought out the safety car after his AlphaTauri slid off the track with a broken suspension, just after Verstappen had pitted from the lead. The safety car meant...