NCAA committee recommends dropping marijuana from banned drug list, focus testing instead on PEDs

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:20:11 GMT

NCAA committee recommends dropping marijuana from banned drug list, focus testing instead on PEDs INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — An NCAA panel is calling for the removal of marijuana from the organization’s list of banned drugs, suggesting that testing should be limited to performance-enhancing substances.The proposal released Friday from the Committee on Competitive Safeguards and Medical Aspects of Sports would mark a big change for the NCAA, which has been conducting drug tests at championship events since 1986. Committee members recommended halting cannabis tests at such events until a final decision is made, likely this fall.Legislation would still have to be introduced and approved by all three NCAA divisions to take effect. Administrators in Divisions II and III had asked the committee to study the issue.The recommendation comes as the U.S. is seeing more and more states allowing medical or recreational marijuana use.Earlier this year, the committee increased the THC threshold needed for a positive test and recommended revamped penalties for athletes. The threshold for THC — t...

Housing affordability crisis requires “all hands on deck” response: CMHC

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:20:11 GMT

Housing affordability crisis requires “all hands on deck” response: CMHC TORONTO — When Bob Dugan surveys the future of Canada’s housing market, he doesn’t see the rosy picture many long for. “I’m actually worried that affordability is going to deteriorate rather than improve unless we can do something about it,” the chief economist at Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation told The Canadian Press on Friday.A day earlier, the country had learned from the Canadian Real Estate Association that the actual national average home price was $729,044 in May, up 3.2 per cent from a year earlier, while the seasonally adjusted average home price was $715,290, up 2.7 per cent from April. The average topped $1 million in the Greater Toronto Area and several parts of B.C. Dugan’s feelings about the lack of affordability have been festering within the federal housing agency for some time, prompting it to ring alarm bells last summer, when it revealed the country needed to build 3.5 million more homes than it is on track for to reach some semblance of affor...

Woman dead in two-vehicle crash in Brampton

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:20:11 GMT

Woman dead in two-vehicle crash in Brampton A woman has died following a multi-vehicle crash in Brampton.Peel Regional Police were called to the Kennedy Road South and Steeles Avenue East area on Friday afternoon for reports of a two-car collision.An adult woman was pronounced dead, police said. It’s unclear if there are other injuries.The drivers of the two vehicles remained at the scene and are cooperating with the police.There are road closures in the area, including westbound at Steeles and southbound at Kennedy.FATAL COLLISION: -Kennedy Rd S / Steeles Ave E #Brampton-Two vehicles, all remained. -Adult Fml has died -Other injuries unknown -W/B Steels blocked -S/B Kennedy blocked -Please use alternate routes-PR230195694— Peel Regional Police (@PeelPolice) June 16, 2023

2024 trial date set for 2 men in Vermont murder-for-hire case

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:20:11 GMT

2024 trial date set for 2 men in Vermont murder-for-hire case BURLINGTON, Vt. (AP) — Two men facing federal charges connected to the 2018 abduction and killing of a Vermont man are scheduled to go on trial in the fall of 2024, a judge decided Friday. U.S. District Court Judge Geoffrey Crawford set an Oct. 7, 2024 start date for the trial of Serhat Gumrukcu, of Los Angeles, and Berk Eratay, of Las Vegas. They pleaded not guilty last year to a charge of wire fraud as part of an alleged international murder-for-hire conspiracy that was tied to an oil deal. The two men were previously charged with arranging to have the third defendant, Jerry Banks, kidnap and kill Gregory Davis, 49, of Danville, Vermont.Banks, of Colorado, who prosecutors say abducted and killed Davis, changed his plea to guilty earlier this month. Prosecutors say Banks was part of a plot that began when Davis had been threatening to go to the FBI to report he’d been involved in a fraudulent oil deal with Gumrukcu. Davis’ body was found by the side of a snowy Vermont back road.A f...

Oath Keepers lawyer’s trial delayed for competency treatment

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:20:11 GMT

Oath Keepers lawyer’s trial delayed for competency treatment WASHINGTON (AP) — The trial of a lawyer for the far-right Oath Keepers extremist group will be delayed so she can get treatment she needs to be mentally competent to stand trial, a judge decided Friday. Kellye SoRelle is charged with conspiracy in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, attack at the U.S. Capitol, but experts for the prosecution and defense found she is not competent for a trial that had been set for July. Those evaluations predicted that three to four months of treatment can restore her to competency, U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta said.She has pleaded not guilty and been free pending trial in Texas. Defense attorney Horatio Aldredge agreed an in-patient treatment program will be required once a spot becomes available. Attorneys did not disclose details of her condition, and Aldredge’s office declined additional comment on her behalf. SoRelle, who served as general counsel for the antigovernment group, was photographed with leader Stewart Rhodes outside the Capitol...

Next round of COVID-19 shots in fall will target latest omicron strain

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:20:11 GMT

Next round of COVID-19 shots in fall will target latest omicron strain NEW YORK (AP) — The next round of COVID-19 vaccines will target one of the latest versions of the coronavirus, the Food and Drug Administration said Friday.FDA’s decision came one day after an agency panel of outside advisers supported the recipe change. The agency told vaccine makers to provide protection against just one omicron strain, known as XBB.1.5. Today’s shots include the original coronavirus and an earlier version of omicron. They do still help prevent severe disease and death even as XBB variants have taken over. But protection gradually wanes over time and was short-lived against milder infection even before the virus, inevitably, evolved again.The three U.S. companies that make COVID-19 shots said this week they had geared up to make the formula change, in anticipation of making many millions of doses available for the fall. One company, Pfizer, said it could have at least some doses ready as early as next month.The Centers for Disease Control and Preventio...

‘Corrupt’ OPP officer guilty of sex assault dismissed after years on paid leave

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:20:11 GMT

‘Corrupt’ OPP officer guilty of sex assault dismissed after years on paid leave An Ontario Provincial Police officer convicted of multiple criminal offences has been dismissed after years of being on paid leave.OPP Commissioner Thomas Carrique says Const. Jason Redmond of the Leeds County detachment was terminated Thursday after abandoning his appeal to overturn a dismissal order.The OPP has terminated the employment of Jason Redmond. Further details are available in the attached statement, which has been issued to the media. pic.twitter.com/mXPzUnDS06— Thomas Carrique (@OPPCommissioner) June 16, 2023“The corrupt, disgraceful and criminal behaviour of this individual is inconsistent with the exemplary conduct of OPP members and our values of serving Ontarians with pride, professionalism and honour,” Carrique said in a statement. “This behaviour also undermines the selfless and heroic acts our officers perform every day while serving and protecting our communities.”Redmond was charged in November 2015, and subsequently convicted in ...

5 sailors injured when US Navy watercraft crashes off California coast

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:20:11 GMT

5 sailors injured when US Navy watercraft crashes off California coast SAN DIEGO (AP) — A small Navy watercraft crashed off the California coast in the pre-dawn hours Friday, injuring five sailors with a Naval Special Warfare unit, an official said.The vessel hit the Zuniga Point Jetty as it entered San Diego Bay about 1:50 a.m., Naval Special Warfare spokesperson Lt. Cmdr. Chelsea K. Irish said in a statement.None of the injuries was life-threatening. Three of the sailors were released from the hospital, and two are in stable condition, Irish said. The sailors are part of a West Coast-based Naval Special Warfare unit and were participating in a routine training exercise, Irish said. The Navy is investigating the cause. The Associated Press

S&P/TSX composite edges lower Friday, U.S. stock markets also decline

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:20:11 GMT

S&P/TSX composite edges lower Friday, U.S. stock markets also decline TORONTO — Canada’s main stock index drifted lower Friday, pulled lower by energy, technology and base metals, while U.S. markets also ended the day down after a busy week of economic data and an interest-rate pause from the central bank.  Markets gave back some of their gains but still finished the week strong, said Monda Mahajan, senior investment strategist with Edward Jones.“I think we’re just taking a bit of a breather before a long weekend here in the U.S.,” she said. The S&P/TSX composite index was down 51.98 points at 19,975.37.In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was down 108.94 points at 34,299.12.The S&P 500 index was down 16.25 points at 4,409.59, while the Nasdaq composite was down 93.25 points at 13,689.57.The big news item for the week was the Federal Reserve’s decision to hold its key interest rate steady for the first time since it began its tightening cycle last year. While the announcement was largely anticipated Wednesday, the central ...

African descent advisory group feels lied to over police return to Vancouver schools

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 08:20:11 GMT

African descent advisory group feels lied to over police return to Vancouver schools VANCOUVER — Members of the African descent advisory committee for the Vancouver Police Department say they feel they were lied to over the process to reinstate a program that deploys armed officers to public schools.Parker Johnson said he and the other committee members had “unanimously and unreservedly” determined they did not want police returning to schools this fall, and they were surprised to learn Thursday that a decision had already been made.Johnson was among those who walked out of a Vancouver Police Board meeting, where board member Rachel Roy resigned over the handling of the re-introduction of the contentious program that had been scrapped by the previous school board in 2021.Newly elected school trustees voted five-to-four last November to bring back a “reimagined” program, while the police board voted to approve the department’s budget, which included an allocation for the school liaison officer program.Video from the previous police board...