Four astronauts launch to the space station as NASA grapples with strange twist in leak issue
Four astronauts launch to the space station as NASA grapples with strange twist in leak issue

Four astronauts launch to the space station as NASA grapples with strange twist in leak issue

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Diverging Reports Breakdown

Hallsville woman accused of stealing disability income

Natalia Phillips, 44, was charged with financially exploiting a disabled person. She is being held at the Boone County Jail on a $50,000 bond. She allegedly took the victim’s money from May 31,2024-Jan. 31, 2025, and used it for herself. Phillips is also charged with selling drugs in a protected location.

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COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Hallsville woman has been charged with two felonies after she allegedly stole the income of someone with a disability.

Natalia Phillips, 44, was charged with financially exploiting a disabled person and stealing more than $750. She is being held at the Boone County Jail on a $50,000 bond. Court date has not been scheduled.

The probable cause statement says that she was appointed to manage the victim’s Supplemental Security Income benefits. She allegedly took the victim’s money from May 31,2024-Jan. 31, 2025, and used it for herself, court documents say. The statement does not list the final total of money she is accused of taking.

A caseworker found out the victim was not receiving their money and allegedly explained to Phillips multiple times that the money had to go to the victim, court documents say.

The victim’s grandmother allegedly told law enforcement that the victim moved away from Phillips in May 2024, but Phillips would not give the victim their disability income, the statement says.

The statement says authorities looked at bank records of a joint account of Phillips and the victim and money was allegedly spent on CashApp purchases.

Phillips allegedly told the Department of Health and Senior Services that she was no longer the person who managed the income, but she did use the victim’s funds for her own uses, the statement says.

In another case Phillips is charged with selling drugs in a protected location. She is being held on a $25,000 bond in that case. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for 9 a.m. Tuesday, July 10.

Source: Abc17news.com | View original article

Fire Erupts at Lower Riviera Apartment Complex in Santa Barbara

Firefighters achieved a full knockdown within 10 minutes. No injuries were reported. A tenant said he was asleep when the fire broke out. Some roads, including Prospect Avenue, were shut down for several hours during the emergency response. The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

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SANTA BARBARA, Calif. — A fire in a Santa Barbara’s Lower Riviera neighborhood Tuesday afternoon prompted a swift response from emergency crews and startled nearby residents.

Reports of smoke coming from a three-story, split-level, multi-family structure at 1750 Prospect Avenue came in just before 12:20 p.m. Santa Barbara City Fire crews and police arrived within minutes to find smoke and flames coming from the second floor of the building.

Firefighters achieved a full knockdown within 10 minutes. No injuries were reported.

Smoke was seen billowing from the upper unit as residents evacuated.

A tenant said he was asleep when the fire broke out.

“I grabbed my shirt, grabbed my shoes, my phone, my wallet — because I didn’t know what was going on. When I got outside, I noticed they were focused on the upstairs unit,” said resident Logan Lewis of Santa Barbara.

“There was smoke coming out the front door, so we pulled an attack line, and the fire has been taken care of,” said firefighter Jack Franklin of the Santa Barbara City Fire Department.

Some roads, including Prospect Avenue, were shut down for several hours during the emergency response.

The cause of the fire remains under investigation.

Source: Keyt.com | View original article

Boeing 737 Max door plug incident: NTSB to announce investigation’s findings

Boeing, Spirit Aerosystems and the FAA are to blame for a door plug blowout on an Alaska Airlines flight. NTSB chairwoman Jennifer Homendy: “I have lots of questions about where the FAA was during all of this” The blowout occurred minutes into a January 2024 flight from Portland, Oregon. It ripped passengers’ clothing and phones out of the plane, but there were no serious injuries on a flight that could easily have turned into a tragedy. The NTSB report criticized the FAA for what the report termed “inadequate oversight.’ “This accident should never have happened. An accident like this only happens when there are multiple system failures,” the report says. “The FAA takes the NTSB recommendations seriously and will carefully evaluate those issued today,’ the FAA says in a statement after Tuesday’s hearing. ‘The FAA has fundamentally changed how it oversees Boeing, to address systemic production-quality issues and ensure accountability’

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Washington, D.C. CNN —

The blame for a horrifying mid-flight blowout of a door plug on an Alaska Airlines flight last year is shared by plane manufacturer Boeing, its supplier Spirit Aerosystems and the Federal Aviation Administration, the chairwoman of the National Transportation Safety Board said at a hearing Tuesday.

“The safety deficiencies that led to this accident should have been evident to Boeing and the FAA,” NTSB chairwoman Jennifer Homendy said in opening remarks.

“I have lots of questions about where the FAA was during all of this. The FAA is the absolute last barrier of defense when it comes to ensuring aviation safety,” she added.

The blowout occurred minutes into a January 2024 flight from Portland, Oregon, when a door plug blew out the side of the plane at about 16,000 feet. It ripped passengers’ clothing and phones out of the plane — but remarkably, there were no serious injuries on a flight that could easily have turned into a tragedy.

The NTSB’s preliminary findings had already revealed that four bolts that were supposed to hold the door plug in place were missing when the plane was delivered to Alaska Air in October 2023.

During Tuesday’s hearing Homendy praised the crew of the Alaska Air flight several times, calling their actions to get the plane on the ground without any casualties “heroic.”

“This crew shouldn’t have had to be heroes,” she said. “This accident should never have happened. An accident like this only happens when there are multiple system failures.”

Nineteen safety recommendations were proposed on Tuesday — 10 to the FAA, nine to Boeing. Some coincided with recommendations that the Office of Inspector General created in a 2024 audit, many of which the FAA has set completion dates for.

“The FAA takes NTSB recommendations seriously and will carefully evaluate those issued today,” the FAA said in a statement after Tuesday’s hearing. “We are actively monitoring Boeing’s performance and meet weekly with the company to review its progress and any challenges it’s facing in implementing necessary changes.”

In a statement Tuesday, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy blamed the oversight slips on the Biden administration, claiming it was “distracted and safety was put at risk.”

“The FAA has fundamentally changed how it oversees Boeing. We have strengthened our oversight to address systemic production-quality issues and ensure accountability. A number of the NTSB’s recommendations have already been implemented, and those that have not are currently under review,” the statement said, adding the FAA “will not lift the 737 production cap until we are fully confident the company can consistently produce aircraft that meet our rigorous safety and quality standards.”

The complete final report on the Alaska Air incident from the NTSB will be available in a few weeks.

‘Inadequate oversight’

Boeing received much of the blame for delivering the plane to Alaska Air without the four bolts needed to hold the door plug in place.

The NTSB determined the probable clause to be the separation of the door plug, due to “Boeing Commercial Airplanes’ failure to provide adequate training, guiding and oversight.” Another contributing factor, according to the NTSB, was the FAA’s “ineffective compliance enforcement surveillance and audit planning activities.”

Tuesday’s hearing revealed that it’s not clear who removed the bolts, which may have been discarded — and the bolts would not have been inspected for another two years if the incident not occurred. After the accident, airlines did inspect all planes with the door plugs.

Still, the NTSB report criticized the FAA for what the report termed “inadequate oversight.”

“This isn’t all on Boeing or Spirit,” said Homendy, referring to Spirit AeroSystems, the Boeing supplier that built the plane’s fuselage.

There wasn’t a recording from the plane’s cockpit voice recorder (CVR). According to Tuesday’s hearing, at least 20 NTSB investigations have been hampered by a lack of CVR data.

The FAA Reauthorization Act of 2024 requires 25-hour CVRs for newly manufactured commercial airplanes. Alaska Airlines is working to retrofit their fleet to meet the mandate and already has six airplanes that have 25-hour CVRs.

The NTSB report also criticized the FAA for not requiring infants to be restrained while on an aircraft, despite years of recommendations that be required. There were three infants being held on their parents’ laps for this flight, and one of the mothers on the plane told a flight attendant during the incident that she thought she had lost her child through the gaping hole in the plane. There were also four unaccompanied minors on the flight.

Multiple rounds of questions from NTSB members at the hearing focused on processes at both Boeing and the FAA, and changes needed to these processes as well as training moving forward. Among other items, investigators spoke about an FAA rule that was not finalized until last year that expands requirements for aviation companies to implement Safety Management Systems (SMS).

The FAA has to provide better guidance on rules for the safety procedures that aviation companies, including aircraft makers like Boeing need to follow, said Sabrina Woods, an accident investigator at NTSB.

In the absence of guidance, commercial aviation has been forced to develop structure based on “systems of trials and errors,” she added.

“I liken it to like building a house: You’re trying to build a house, and you don’t get the blueprints until about nine years later,” Woods said.

Boeing’s new CEO inherits challenges

Boeing has replaced its CEO since the incident. Homendy said she has had “several great discussions” with the new CEO, Kelly Ortberg, and praised his actions since he started the job last August.

“He has done a lot of work at Boeing since this accident. He has a lot of work cut out for him, a lot of challenges to address. And that is going to take time,” she said.

Homendy acknowledged that both Boeing and Spirit AeroSystems have implemented new quality control systems, and that she is “grateful for their progress. But you’ll hear today more can and should be done.”

She also hopes new leadership at the FAA and the Department of Transportation will make more efforts to improve safety.

“I believe Boeing, Spirit and the FAA will take the lessons learned from this accident to heart,” she said. “Appropriate oversight (by the FAA) of those they are charged with regulating is critical. I’m hopeful that with new leadership at DOT and the FAA, that will occur.”

After the hearing on Tuesday, a Boeing spokesperson said in a statement: “We at Boeing regret this accident and continue to work on strengthening safety and quality across our operations. We will review the final report and recommendations as we continue to implement improvements.”

Boeing told investigators that there was no internal paperwork showing that the door plug had been removed and then put back in place without the bolts, so workers who were moving the plane along the production line were not aware it needed to have the bolts reattached.

Boeing employees said in interviews with investigators they felt pressure to work too fast, making it difficult to avoid mistakes.

The NTSB hearing Tuesday comes at a fraught time for Boeing, which is now part of an investigation into the fatal crash of a 787 Dreamliner operated by Air India this month.

While there is no indication yet that Boeing’s work caused the crash of the nearly 11-year-old plane, confidence in Boeing could suffer further if the company is found to be even partly at fault.

Boeing has little reputation left to lose after two fatal 737 Max crashes in 2018 and 2019, respectively, were traced back to design and software errors — plus the Alaska Air incident.

CNN’s Ramishah Maruf contributed to this report.

Source: Cnn.com | View original article

Fire reported in bathroom of middle school in Pulaski County

A fire was reported Tuesday in the bathroom of Waynesville Middle School. The fire was quickly extinguished, the St. Robert Fire Department says. The school evacuated the building.

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COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A fire was reported Tuesday in the bathroom of Waynesville Middle School, according to a social media post from the St. Robert Fire Department.

The department wrote that it was called around 10 a.m. and found moderate smoke in the building. It found a fire in one of the bathrooms, which was quickly extinguished, the post says.

The school evacuated the building and wrote on its social media that summer school students returned to class around 11 a.m. It also wrote that high school students are temporarily having class at Parker Educational Center.

Source: Abc17news.com | View original article

Firefighter injured after firetruck crashes in Pulaski County

A Waynesville firefighter suffered minor injuries after a firetruck crashed Monday morning. The truck blew out a tire near mile maker 156, causing the truck to go into an embankment, hit a sign and stop on the shoulder

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COLUMBIA, Mo. (KMIZ)

A Waynesville firefighter suffered minor injuries after a firetruck crashed Monday morning on Interstate 44, according to a social media post from the Waynesville Rural Fire Protection District.

The truck blew out a tire near mile maker 156, causing the truck to go into an embankment, hit a sign and stop on the shoulder, the post says. The windshield on the driver’s side shattered and the driver was brought to an area hospital with minor injuries, the report says.

Two other firefighters in the vehicle had no reported injuries. The firetruck was totaled, the post says.

Source: Abc17news.com | View original article

Source: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMifkFVX3lxTFA5dExYT3BFM3ZMTno2ekR0RHhvSGhFb2hNdnBXR25MTk55S0d5RHVFLVQ5UnFWcHc4SmFaM2s1VzlXbVk2VW83RWlTUDJHS3Qtb1JuSEYxY0tlbVl2RF9xaERvTzJJRVpncmtfQXB0dTZXOExCck1PNEMzS2tsQdIBgwFBVV95cUxQNDZ4TXhkNDRoLWVmRDBHb04xOGd0dUd3Q0hjQTRJcnRTQ1hMWF9WNlI3V1ZfMkY5X01oWkYwT0pfRlZseGRjdW1UUjF0WWt3SmVVXzMxclFEOVhaVktTR0QxTGx1QV9LbG82MEVPNmdsbTRZYmZuLXRTNjNBcnhLSlVfQQ?oc=5

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