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New Deal Reached to End Wildcat Strikes by N.Y. Prison Guards

A brand new settlement has been reached to finish wildcat strikes by 1000’s of New York State correctional officers, which have created chaos all through the jail system.
Beneath the settlement, negotiated by state officers and the correctional officers’ union, the officers are anticipated to return to work Monday.
The officers, who maintained that staffing shortages, compelled time beyond regulation and harmful working situations prompted the unlawful strikes, had acquired an ultimatum this week from the Division of Corrections and Neighborhood Supervision: return to their posts or face self-discipline, termination or, presumably, prison fees, in line with a memorandum issued by the company.
The union agreed on Saturday to the phrases outlined within the memorandum, the corrections division mentioned in an announcement. These phrases will take impact when 85 % of workers return to work. Any disputes over the settlement can be resolved by an arbitrator.
It was unclear on Sunday how the union, the New York State Correctional Officers and Police Benevolent Affiliation, would implement the return-to-work provision because it didn’t authorize the strikes. The division and the union struck a similar deal last month that may have ended the strikes by March 1. Most officers ignored that settlement.
Within the new memorandum, the state agreed to a 90-day pause on some provisions within the Humane Options to Lengthy-Time period Solitary Confinement Act, often known as HALT, which limits the usage of solitary confinement for prisoners.
Officers on strike have mentioned that, with out solitary confinement, they can not correctly separate violent people from workers members and different incarcerated folks. The corrections division will re-evaluate the provisions subsequent month and decide whether or not they need to be reinstituted. If staffing vacancies attain 30 % at a given jail, the division could shut elements of the power to stop officers from being stretched too skinny, the memorandum mentioned.
The company reserved the fitting to punish the officers who went on strike, the assertion mentioned.
The union couldn’t be reached on Sunday for touch upon the settlement.
The turmoil started on Feb. 17, when officers at two state prisons declared unauthorized strikes. Two days later, a judge ordered an finish to the work stoppage.
As an alternative, extra strikes ensued. Officers at almost all of the 42 state prisons joined the work motion, and Gov. Kathy Hochul deployed about 7,000 Nationwide Guard troops to workers the services.
In the course of the labor unrest, Messiah Nantwi, a 22-year-old prisoner, died on March 1 at Mid-State Correctional Facility in Marcy, N.Y. Two days later, 15 corrections division employees were put on leave in connection together with his dying.
Nine prisoners interviewed by The New York Times mentioned Mr. Nantwi died after he was crushed by jail guards. Gov. Kathy Hochul mentioned that whereas the dying was nonetheless below investigation, “early experiences level to extraordinarily disturbing conduct resulting in Mr. Nantwi’s dying.”
A minimum of eight different prisoners have died for the reason that strikes started. They embody two males at Auburn Correctional Facility in central New York who didn’t instantly obtain medical therapy, in line with prisoners, and a person who hanged himself inside his cell at Sing Sing Correctional Facility within the Hudson Valley. Some inmates have gone with out showers and scorching meals all through the strikes, whereas others have missed their courtroom dates.
Dozens of officers and sergeants who’ve participated within the strikes have been fired, Jackie Bray, the commissioner of the New York State Division of Homeland Safety and Emergency Companies, mentioned at a information convention final week.
News
Delta dumped jet fuel on schoolkids, agrees to $79-million settlement

Delta Air Lines has agreed to pay $79 million for dumping 15,000 gallons of jet fuel onto a community in southeastern Los Angeles County five years ago, drenching children playing at a school, to settle a federal lawsuit by local residents.
On Jan. 20, 2020, Delta Flight 89 took off from Los Angeles International Airport en route to Shanghai with 149 passengers for what is typically a 13-hour nonstop flight.
That voyage, however, lasted only 25 minutes due to a plane malfunction, forcing the pilot to turn the aircraft around over the Santa Monica Bay and head back toward the airport.
In the lawsuit settlement, Delta said the plane lost thrust shortly after takeoff. The plane couldn’t land, however, because it was already over the maximum landing weight of 160,000 pounds. Flights landing at LAX typically approach the airport from an inland route and take off over the ocean.
En route back to the airport, the plane’s pilots dumped thousands of gallons of jet fuel over Cudahy and multiple schools.
Dozens of children, and 40 people overall, from Park Avenue Elementary School in Cudahy were hit by the fuel and treated by medical personnel.
Other schools, including Pioneer High School in Whittier, also claimed students were hit with the jet fuel.
Delta noted in court documents that it agreed to the settlement “without any admission of liability” to avoid the uncertainty and expenses of a trial and “to eliminate the distraction and other burdens this litigation has caused to Delta’s business.”
The lawsuit was filed by two Cudahy couples and homeowners, Frankie Lomas and Roxanda Yancor, and Jose and Maria Alvarado.
The settlement totals $78.8 million, which translates into $50.6 million for victims after attorneys’ fees and other court costs. The fund will be sliced into thirds, with two-thirds, or about $33.9 million, set aside for property owners, and one-third, or about $16.7 million, for residents.
At bare minimum, a property owner will receive $888.82 per claim, while a resident will receive $104.34, according to court documents.
The estimated numbers of those who were affected are listed in the lawsuit as 160,000 residents and 38,000 properties.
Calls to the plaintiff’s attorney and Delta Air Lines were not immediately returned.
News
What We Know About the Minneapolis Catholic School Shooting
Investigators were still searching for a motive in the shooting, which left two children dead at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis.
News
CDC Director Susan Monarez refuses to step down, arguing only President Trump can fire her

Susan Monarez, the director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is being ousted from her role less than a month after the Senate confirmed her to lead the public health agency, the White House confirmed to CBS News.
The Department of Health and Human Services announced in an X post Wednesday that Monarez no longer leads the CDC. Reports on her ouster were immediately followed by a dispute between the administration and her attorneys regarding whether she had been legally fired, with lawyers for Monarez arguing she’s still in charge of the CDC and only President Trump can fire her.
It’s not clear why Monarez was removed from the job — but several other top CDC officials resigned Wednesday, often citing disagreements with the Trump administration over its vaccine policy, budgets cuts to the agency, and what one described as the “weaponization of public health.”
Prominent D.C.-based attorney Mark Zaid said in a statement that Monarez “has neither resigned nor received notification from the White House that she was fired.” He said that he and lawyer Abbe Lowell are representing Monarez.
Zaid alleged that Monarez was “targeted” because she “refused to rubber-stamp unscientific, reckless directives and fire dedicated public health experts.”
White House spokesman Kush Desai alleged in response that Monarez was terminated because she “refused to resign despite informing HHS leadership of her intent to do so.”
“As her attorney’s statement makes abundantly clear, Susan Monarez is not aligned with the President’s agenda of Making America Healthy Again,” Desai said in response to Zaid’s initial statement.
Hours later, Zaid and Lowell said Monarez was told of her firing Wednesday night by a “White House staffer in the personnel office.” In a statement to CBS News, they called the move “legally deficient” and argued that she remains the leader of the CDC because, as a presidential appointee, “only the president himself can fire her.”
On Monday, Monarez had to cancel an agency-wide meeting because she had been summoned to Washington, D.C., according to CDC officials.
In its X post, HHS thanked Monarez “for her dedicated service for the American people,” and said Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy Jr. “has full confidence in his team” at the CDC.
At least three other senior CDC leaders have resigned from the agency, according to resignation emails obtained by CBS News.
Daniel Jernigan, who led the CDC’s National Center for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, told colleagues he was leaving due to “the current context in the Department.” The CDC’s Chief Medical Officer Debra Houry and the head of the National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, Demetre Daskalakis, also announced their departures.
Houry’s message to CDC staffers warned about the “rise of misinformation” about vaccines. She also argued planned cuts to the agency’s budget will hurt the CDC.
“For the good of the nation and the world, the science at CDC should never be censored or subject to political pauses or interpretations,” wrote Houry, who worked at the CDC for over a decade. “Vaccines save lives—this is an indisputable, well-established, scientific fact.”
Daskalakis said in a note to CDC staff: “I am not able to serve in this role any longer because of the ongoing weaponizing of public health.”
Daskalakis also posted on X a resignation letter addressed to Houry, in which he criticized recent changes to vaccine recommendations and warned of an “intentional eroding of trust in low-risk vaccines.” He also said Kennedy and his staff’s views “challenge my ability to continue in my current role at the agency.”
“Having worked in local and national public health for years, I have never experienced such radical non-transparency, nor have I seen such unskilled manipulation of data to achieve a political end rather than the good of the American people,” Daskalakis wrote.
Democratic Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, who serves on the Senate health committee, reacted to Monarez’s ouster by calling for Kennedy to be fired, calling him “a dangerous man who is determined to abuse his authority to act on truly terrifying conspiracy theories and disinformation.”
“If there are any adults left in the White House, it’s well past time they face reality and fire RFK Jr,” Murray said in a statement.
CDC departures follow months of upheaval
The sudden departures come at a tumultuous time for the public health agency. Staff are still reeling from an early August shooting outside the CDC’s Atlanta headquarters by a gunman who police said was upset about COVID-19 vaccines.
Kennedy — a longtime vaccine skeptic — also fired every member of an independent CDC panel tasked with making vaccine recommendations. During Kennedy’s tenure, HHS has made other moves on vaccines that have troubled public health and infectious disease experts. Kennedy halted contracts for mRNA vaccine research earlier this month, and the Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday approved updated COVID-19 vaccines for seniors and people with health conditions, but not for healthy adults and children.
Meanwhile, the CDC faced hundreds of layoffs this year.
There has been some friction between Monarez and Kennedy over COVID-19 vaccines and the CDC’s vaccine advisory panel, CDC officials told CBS News. Monarez has publicly said that vaccines “save lives.” The Trump administration was also unhappy with the way she had talked about the Atlanta shooting and stopped her from publishing an op-ed about the incident, the officials said.
Mr. Trump nominated Monarez to lead the CDC in late March, calling her a “dedicated public servant” who could repair what he called a loss of public confidence in the CDC “due to political bias and disastrous mismanagement.” Monarez was confirmed by the Senate in a party-line vote in late July, after previously serving as the agency’s acting head starting in January.
She was nominated to lead the agency after Mr. Trump pulled his initial pick for the job, former Florida Rep. Dave Weldon, a physician who was controversial in part due to his past skepticism of vaccines. In private meetings with Weldon, some Republican senators and their staffers grew concerned that he seemed unfamiliar with the CDC’s operations, CBS News reported at the time.
Monarez holds a Ph.D. in microbiology and immunology, though unlike most prior CDC directors, she is not a medical doctor. She previously served as deputy director of the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health, a federal agency that backs advanced medical research. She also worked in the Obama-era White House’s science and technology office and the Department of Homeland Security during Mr. Trump’s first term.
During her Senate confirmation hearing, Monarez faced a number of questions about vaccine recommendations. Kennedy has pushed a discredited theory linking routine childhood shots to autism, but during her hearing, Monarez refuted that view and said she has “not seen a causal link between vaccines and autism.”
“Vaccines absolutely save lives, and if I’m confirmed as CDC director, I commit to making sure we continue to prioritize vaccine availability,” Monarez told lawmakers.
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