Teachers in Andover reach deal to end strike

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:43:50 GMT

Teachers in Andover reach deal to end strike Teachers in Andover have reached a deal to end their strike, officials said Tuesday.Parties agreed on a new contract late Tuesday afternoon. Their deal came five days after union members voted to authorize a strike on Friday of last week. The strike vote, in turn, came after months of negotiations between the Andover Education Association and the Andover School Committee. “The AEA is ecstatic to announce that we have come to an agreement and the strike is OVER!” the Andover Education Association said in its statement on social media moments after 5 p.m. The education association said all educators and students will return to school on Wednesday. The Andover School Committee confirmed a deal was in place.“We cannot begin to thank the Andover community enough for their support,” the education association said. “We cannot wait to see our students in school tomorrow!”The roughly 800 Andover Education Association members had been manning picket lines in recent days, also t...

Concord, NH police investigating after skimmers found on credit card machines in local stores

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:43:50 GMT

Concord, NH police investigating after skimmers found on credit card machines in local stores Police in Concord, New Hampshire are investigating after they said they found skimmers on credit card machines at checkout lanes in two separate stores last month. Concord police shared details about the case on Monday night. Weeks earlier, on Oct. 19, police said workers at the Walmart location on Loudon Road in town told authorities that a loss prevention associate had found a credit card skimmer attached to a self-checkout register. Police said a loss prevention associate at the Market Basket location on Storrs Street later reached out on Oct. 27, saying they had also found a skimmer on an express lane checkout.Concord police on Monday said investigators determined both skimmers were installed by the same two people on Oct. 17.  Asked how someone would get a skimmer onto a machine in a store with other people around, Concord Police Lt. Marc McGonagle responded.“I’m assuming they are practiced,” he told 7NEWS. “They work in a group and they pay attention a...

Fiscal ‘storm clouds’ growing over Massachusetts after lower than expected tax collections

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:43:50 GMT

Fiscal ‘storm clouds’ growing over Massachusetts after lower than expected tax collections Massachusetts is not “raining money” anymore, state lawmakers said Tuesday.The top Senate budget writer and the chamber’s ranking Republican painted a less than ideal fiscal picture for Massachusetts, airing during a debate concerns they had for the future health of the state’s finances after multiple months of lower than expected tax collections.Massachusetts has experienced four consecutive months of below benchmark revenue collections during the start of fiscal year 2024, said Senate Ways and Means Chair Michael Rodrigues, a Westport Democrat. That follows years of “very robust revenue collections,” he said.“Even though there are storm clouds on the horizon, it’s not bright and sunny, it’s not raining money as it has been over the last few years, we are still being responsible in addressing the long-term liabilities of the commonwealth,” Rodrigues said.The first two months of the fiscal year, July and August, saw revenue collections collectively $20 millio...

Boston’s Peter Lynch inducted into Caddie Hall of Fame

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:43:50 GMT

Boston’s Peter Lynch inducted into Caddie Hall of Fame Boston resident Peter Lynch was recently inducted into the Caddie Hall of Fame in recognition of his time caddying as a teenager in Massachusetts and his use of caddying as a steppingstone to professional success.Lynch, one of the most successful money managers in Wall Street history, was honored during a ceremony at the Western Golf Association’s Green Coat Gala, a black-tie affair at The Peninsula Chicago, where more than 300 supporters helped raised more than $8.4 million for the Evans Scholars Foundation, in Chicago.Lynch caddied at Brae Burn Country Club in West Newton, which paved the way for him to receive a Francis Ouimet Fund Scholarship to attend Boston College. In 2010, he received the Ouimet Fund’s Richard F. Connolly, Jr. Distinguished Service Award for his dedication and commitment to supporting youth caddies.Lynch would eventually manage the Magellan Fund at Fidelity. 

Ex-officer Derek Chauvin makes another bid to overturn federal conviction in murder of George Floyd

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:43:50 GMT

Ex-officer Derek Chauvin makes another bid to overturn federal conviction in murder of George Floyd By STEVE KARNOWSKI (Associated Press)MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin is making another attempt to overturn his federal civil rights conviction in the 2020 murder of George Floyd, saying new evidence shows that he didn’t cause Floyd’s death.In a motion filed in federal court Monday, Chauvin said he never would have pleaded guilty to the charge in 2021 if he had known about the theories of a Kansas forensic pathologist with whom he began corresponding in February. Chauvin is asking the judge who presided over his trial to throw out his conviction and order a new trial, or at least an evidentiary hearing.Floyd, who was Black, died on May 25, 2020 after Chauvin, who is white, kneeled on his neck for 9 1/2 minutes on the street outside a convenience store where Floyd tried to pass a counterfeit $20 bill. A bystander video captured Floyd’s fading cries of “I can’t breathe.” Floyd’s death touched off protest...

The Georgia district attorney who charged Trump expects his trial to be underway over Election Day

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:43:50 GMT

The Georgia district attorney who charged Trump expects his trial to be underway over Election Day By KATE BRUMBACK (Associated Press)ATLANTA (AP) — The Georgia district attorney who charged former President Donald Trump over his efforts to overturn the state’s 2020 election said Tuesday that she expects his trial will be underway through Election Day next year and could possibly stretch past the inauguration in 2025.Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis made the comments at an event sponsored by The Washington Post. Her remarks came shortly after Willis asked a judge for an emergency protective order to prevent evidence in the case from being leaked, just a day after news outlets reported on prosecutors’ video interviews with four co-defendants who have pleaded guilty in the case.Trump was indicted along with 18 others in Fulton County in August on charges they participated in a wide-ranging conspiracy to keep the Republican incumbent in power after he lost to Democrat Joe Biden. Trump and the remaining defendants — including former New York Mayor R...

Andover teachers reach tentative contract deal with town after five-day strike

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:43:50 GMT

Andover teachers reach tentative contract deal with town after five-day strike Andover teachers are heading back to school Wednesday and classes will resume after they reached a tentative contract agreement with the School Committee.The five-day strike that closed school for three days since last Friday came to an end around 5 p.m. Tuesday, the Andover Education Association and School Committee announced in separate posts.“We cannot begin to thank the Andover community enough for their support,” the union stated. “We cannot wait to see our students in school tomorrow!”The tentative agreement, according to the School Committee, “boosts contractual increases for teachers by 15.5% and for instructional assistants by 34%, each over four years.”Union leaders negotiated with the School Committee for more than 60 hours across five days, with sessions led by a state-appointed mediator.“We are pleased that students can get back into the classroom tomorrow morning to continue learning,” said Tracey Spruce, chair of the School Committee.  “With this deal, the administrat...

Blue Jays’ Chapman declines qualifying offer, stays on open market

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:43:50 GMT

Blue Jays’ Chapman declines qualifying offer, stays on open market Third baseman Matt Chapman has declined the Toronto Blue Jays’ qualifying offer and remains a free agent.Chapman was one of seven players who turned down $20.325-million qualifying offers from their former teams Tuesday.The Jays extended the offer on Nov. 6. Chapman had until Tuesday to accept it.Toronto will receive an additional selection in next year’s Major League Baseball draft in compensation if Chapman signs elsewhere.Chapman signed a two-year, $25-million contract with Toronto before the 2022 season after spending his first five Major League Baseball seasons in Oakland.He hit .234 with 44 home runs and 130 runs batted in over two seasons with the Jays and was named a Gold Glove Award winner this season.

US Army to overturn century-old convictions of 110 Black soldiers

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:43:50 GMT

US Army to overturn century-old convictions of 110 Black soldiers HOUSTON (AP) — The U.S. Army is overturning the convictions of 110 Black soldiers — 19 of whom were executed — for a mutiny at a Houston military camp a century ago, an effort to atone for imposing harsh punishments linked to Jim Crow-era racism.U.S. Army officials announced the historic reversal Monday during a ceremony posthumously honoring the regiment known as the Buffalo Soldiers, who had been sent to Houston in 1917, during World War I, to guard a military training facility. Clashes arose between the regiment and white police officers and civilians, and 19 people were killed.“We cannot change the past; however, this decision provides the Army and the American people an opportunity to learn from this difficult moment in our history,” Under Secretary of the Army Gabe Camarillo said in a statement.The South Texas College of Law first requested that the Army look into the cases in October 2020, and again in December 2021. The Army then received clemency petitions from retired gene...

B.C. man ordered to pay $450,000 over 2019 wildfire triggered by debris burn

Published Fri, 15 Nov 2024 06:43:50 GMT

B.C. man ordered to pay $450,000 over 2019 wildfire triggered by debris burn VICTORIA — The B.C. Forest Appeals Commission says a man who lit a large debris pile on fire that eventually caused a wildfire should pay the provincial government nearly $450,000 for firefighting costs and lost timber resources.In an appeal decision released last week, the commission says Clarke Matthiesen tried to blame an arsonist for the blaze that investigators say started on his property west of Quesnel, B.C., in the province’s interior. The decision says Matthiesen lit the debris fire on a property he owns with his brother in February 2019, thinking snow around the blaze would work as a “fuel break.” But it says that more than two months later, Matthiesen and his brother came upon a grass fire nearby, which they couldn’t put out with shovels. It says Matthiesen then drove to a neighbouring property to report the fire, and the BC Wildfire Service responded that evening.The commission rejected Matthiesen’s claims that his neighbour’s grandson...