Sunday, March 27, 2011

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Winter weather to make weekend comeback in some states (Reuters)

Posted: 26 Mar 2011 08:54 AM PDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Cold weather, snow, and severe storms were expected over the weekend in several parts of the country, weather forecasters said on Saturday.

A band of snow and cold rain is expected to sweep from Omaha, Nebraska to the District of Columbia, according to AccuWeather.com.

"While the storm will not bring excessive snowfall, it will put down as much as 6 inches of snow along part of this path," AccuWeather.com senior metrologist Alex Sosnowski said. "Most areas within the west-east band will get 1 to 3 inches of snow."

The storm is expected to reach Illinois by Saturday evening and Virginia overnight.

The Weather Channel described the weekend weather as being a clash between winter and spring.

Heavy rain and thunderstorms are likely all day Saturday and throughout the night in much of the South, the Weather Channel's Tim Ballisty said.

The Tennessee River Valley will see the heaviest rain while high winds and large hail will rip through Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia.

The National Weather service has issued flood alerts in those areas.

In the West, heavy snow will continue in the Sierra Nevada mountain range, adding between two and four feet to the one to four feet already on the ground, according to accuweather.com, presenting an avalanche risk.

Heavy rain will pound closer to the Pacific coast from central California to Southern Washington, amounting to between one and three inches.

Combined with what has been heavy rain for March, the rain will likely trigger flash flooding, mudslides and debris flows.

(Reporting by Wendell Marsh; Editing by Jerry Norton)



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Fresh controversy in Wisconsin union bill fight (Reuters)

Posted: 26 Mar 2011 02:33 PM PDT

MADISON, Wis (Reuters) – Opponents of a bill stripping Wisconsin public employees of most of their collective bargaining rights rallied at the state Capitol on Saturday, the day after a state agency published the measure despite an order barring such a move.

Republican supporters of the measure said the action by the state's Legislative Reference Bureau (LRB), which published the bill electronically on Friday, was legal and meant the controversial anti-union measure was now in effect.

But Democrats insisted the temporary restraining order (TRO) on publication issued last week by a judge remained in effect and rendered Friday's publication by the LRB moot.

The move injected fresh controversy into the debate here over the measure, which would overturn a 52-year-old state policy encouraging public-sector unionism and sparked massive demonstrations in Madison, the state capital, for weeks.

Lester Pines, an attorney who represents unionized teachers in Madison, told the Wisconsin State Journal newspaper the LRB's action, which appeared to contravene both the court order and specific written instructions from the Secretary of State, would "unleash a tsunami of litigation."

Peter Barca, the top Democrat in the state Assembly, said he had consulted with attorneys at the Wisconsin Legislative Council (WLC), a separate nonpartisan legislative agency, and had been assured the measure would not be deemed legally published without further action by Wisconsin's secretary of state.

Legal publication of the legislation is required for it to go into effect.

Barca distributed a memo to the media from Scott Grosz, a staff attorney with the WLC, supporting that interpretation.

"While certain statutory obligations regarding publication of Act 10 have been satisfied by the LRB," Grosz wrote in the memo, "the statutory obligation that relates to the effective date of Act 10 has not yet been satisfied by the Secretary of State, and at this time the Secretary's actions remain subject to the temporary restraining order issued in Dane County Circuit Court."

Dane County District Attorney Ismael Ozanne, who filed the complaint that generated the restraining order, agreed. He said the judge issuing the order had been clear it was designed to "preserve the status quo" -- not to enjoin a particular individual.

But Republicans, including Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald, disagreed.

In an interview with Reuters on Saturday, Fitzgerald reiterated his view that the LRB's action did not violate the TRO because the bureau was not specifically mentioned in the order.

"The LRB clearly had authority to do what it did yesterday -- not only the authority but the obligation," Fitzgerald said. "And it's my understanding that, as of this morning, it's the law."

Mary Bell, the president of the Wisconsin education Association Council, a teachers union whose members are among those affected by the law, called the Friday move "another sign that the governor and legislature are in a desperate power grab to take away the voice of teachers, support staff, nurses, home health care workers and other public employees."

The court appeal was based on an argument that the state's open meeting laws had been violated when the bill was passed. rather than a challenge to its contents, meaning even if the appeal were ultimately upheld the Republican-dominated state legislature is likely to simply pass the measure again.

But so long as it is not in legal effect, public employee unions can try to use existing bargaining powers to negotiate better contracts before their rights are curbed.

Republican Governor Scott Walker had strongly pushed the legislation, saying it was part of a package needed to combat the state's budget deficit.

Union and Democratic critics said that argument was a smoke screen for busting state workers' unions. The issue attracted hundreds of thousands to demonstrations against the measure.

Democratic state senators fled the state in an ultimately unsuccessful effort to block a vote on the measure, and the battle over the bill has become a symbol for other states where unions are trying to preserve bargaining powers as Republican-led legislatures seek to curb them.

(Writing by James Kelleher; Editing by Jerry Norton)



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Police shoot driver after chase on Bronx expressway (Reuters)

Posted: 26 Mar 2011 05:09 PM PDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Police shot dead a driver on a congested Bronx expressway on Saturday, after he crashed into several vehicles and tried to run down officers as they approached his car, authorities said.

Police said they tried to pull over Orlando Santos, 28, around midnight as he drove down the notoriously congested Major Deegan Expressway that passes through the Bronx, because one of his headlights was out.

Santos sped off, striking several cars before crashing. As officers approached on foot, he then drove his Ford Expedition "forward and reverse in a deliberate attempt" to hit them, twice refusing orders to get out of the car, the New York Police Department said.

Police fired shots, the suspect moved his car again, hitting several other vehicles and again drove at officers, two of whom had to dive over a barrier to avoid being hit. Other officers then shot and killed him.

Some 10 vehicles were damaged in the melee, and four people were treated in hospital for injuries.

The northbound expressway remained closed throughout the morning, only reopening around midday.

(Reporting by Chris Michaud; editing by Tim Gaynor)



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