Tag Archives: City

Miami mayor says Elon Musk will tunnel under the city for just $30 million

Elon Musk told Miami’s mayor Friday that The Boring Company could dig a two-mile tunnel under the city for as little as $30 million — a fraction of the $1 billion price tag once quoted by local transit officials. Musk also told the Mayor that The Boring Company could complete the job in six months, versus the original four year estimate.

Mayor Francis Suarez shared these details about his “wonderful call” with Musk in a video posted to Twitter. “He’s focused on trying to deliver a project that will have the maximum utility for our residents for the least amount of money,” Suarez said. “The order of magnitude in terms of savings is significant.”

Musk first tweeted about wanting to tunnel under Miami on January 18th. “Cars & trucks stuck in traffic generate megatons of toxic gases & particulate, but @boringcompany road tunnels under Miami would solve traffic & be an example to the world,” he wrote. Musk said in the tweet that he had already spoken to Florida Governor Ron DeSantis about the idea. “If Governor & Mayor want this done, we will do it.”

Suarez said Friday that he will speak to DeSantis and the mayor of Miami-Dade county. “I think we have a unique opportunity to create a signature project not just for Miami, but for the world,” he said.

Tunneling under Miami is not easy because the city is built on limestone, which is spongey. That hurdle is one reason for the sky-high price tag quoted in 2018. It also helped drive up the price of a tunnel under the Port of Miami, which was less than a mile but still cost around $700 million.

The Miami Herald reported Friday that the limestone bedrock and the impact of rising sea levels were among the talking points for the call, though it’s unclear to what extent these items were discussed. Musk has previously talked about digging tunnels as deep underground as skyscrapers are tall.

Musk started The Boring Company in 2016, and has started a handful of projects around the country in the years since. The purpose and scope of the tunnels has changed a bit over that time. These days, the company is trying to make a transportation service that uses Teslas traveling through the tunnels. The first commercial service is nearing completion underneath the Las Vegas Convention Center, though The Boring Company recently announced a massive city-wide expansion that would service the Strip and the airport. The company is also in negotiations for a tunnel in San Bernardino County, California.

Other attempts have not gone so well, like a failed project in Chicago and a canceled tunnel in West Los Angeles.



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Kansas City Chiefs assistant coach Britt Reid involved in multicar crash with life-threatening injuries

Britt Reid, the son of Kansas City Chiefs head coach Andy Reid and the team’s outside linebackers coach, was involved in a multicar accident Thursday night that has left a 5-year-old child with life-threatening injuries, according to a team statement and the police report.

Reid, who was scheduled to leave with the Chiefs on Saturday for Super Bowl LV against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, is now not expected to travel to Tampa, Florida, a source told ESPN.

According to an incident report provided by the Kansas City Missouri Police Department (KCPD), a car ran out of gas on an on-ramp to Interstate 435 in Kansas City on Thursday night. After the driver called relatives for help, a second car arrived, also parking on the on-ramp.

According to the police report, a third car, which Kansas City television station KSHB says was driven by Britt Reid, then came along and struck first the left front of the disabled vehicle and then the rear of the second vehicle, where the 5-year-old child was in the back seat along with a 4-year-old child, who also was taken by ambulance to an area hospital but with non-life-threatening injuries.

The station said Reid acknowledged to police that he was driving the third car, according to a search warrant. The police report said the driver of the third car suffered non-life-threatening injuries and was being investigated for possible impairment.

According to the search warrant obtained by KSHB, a KCPD officer said Reid’s eyes were bloodshot and the officer smelled “a moderate odor of alcoholic beverages.” The warrant went on to say Reid told the officer that he had had two to three drinks and that he also took prescription Adderall.

“The organization has been made aware of a multi-vehicle accident involving Outside Linebackers Coach, Britt Reid,” the Chiefs said in a statement Friday. “We are in the process of gathering information, and we will have no further comment at this time. Our thoughts and prayers are with everyone involved.”

No one involved in the multicar accident is identified by name in the police report.

The driver of the disabled vehicle was inside the car at the time of the first collision but was not injured, the police report said, and the driver of the second vehicle and a front-seat adult passenger also were not injured.

Reid, 35, joined the Chiefs in 2013 as a defensive assistant coach. He became assistant defensive line coach in 2015 and defensive line coach in 2016. He became the outside linebackers coach in 2019.

Reid pleaded guilty to DUI in 2008. One year earlier, he pleaded guilty to flashing a gun at another motorist and was sentenced to eight to 23 months in prison.

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Ohio State Knocks Off Hawkeyes, 89-85, In Top-10 Iowa City Showdown

Month by month, week by week, day by day, Ohio State just keeps getting better.

Chris Holtmann’s team entered Thursday having won six of its past seven games, including three victories against teams ranked within the top-15 when the games tipped off, and it just secured its best win yet.

The seventh-ranked Buckeyes waltzed into Iowa City, Iowa, for a top-10 matchup with the No. 8 Hawkeyes and won, 89-85, in Carver-Hawkeye Arena. They improved to 15-4 overall and 9-4 within the Big Ten.

Team 1 2 FINAL
#7 OHIO STATE 42 47 89
#8 IOWA 45 40 85

The game was tied 75-75 with 5:23 remaining, and from there Ohio State went on a 13-6 run sparked by three Justin Ahrens 3-pointers after he missed his first four of the night. The final Ahrens triple put the Buckeyes up 88-81 with 2:39 remaining. More than two scoreless minutes from Ohio State allowed Iowa to close the gap to 88-85 with 37 seconds remaining.

Four Buckeyes – E.J. Liddell (16 points), Kyle Young (16 points), Duane Washington Jr. (16 points) and Justice Sueing (12 points) – scored in double figures. 

Iowa, behind an offense that ranks fourth-best in adjusted efficiency in the past two decades, threatened to pull away before the midpoint of the second half. 

A pair of 3s from Joe Wieskamp and Luke Garza put Fran McCaffrey’s team on top by 11 points with 14:29 remaining. At that point, the Buckeyes had only made one shot from the field since they left the locker room when halftime concluded. Yet back-to-back 3-pointers from Duane Washington – along with a Zed Key free throw – chopped the deficit to four points, and a subsequent 10-5 run put Ohio State up 67-66 with 10:12 to go. They traded blows the the rest of the night, responding quickly each time the opponent got something going offensively.

OHIO STATE STAT IOWA
89 POINTS 85
31-65 (47.7%) FGM-FGA (PCT.) 30-68 (44.1%)
14-32 (43.8%) 3PM-3PA (PCT.) 14-32 (43.8%)
13-19 (68.4%) FTM-FTA (PCT.) 11-17 (64.7%)
6 TURNOVERS 6
43 TOTAL REBOUNDS 36
11 OFFENSIVE REBOUNDS 11
32 DEFENSIVE REBOUNDS 25
20 BENCH POINTS 26
4 BLOCKS 0
4 STEALS 4
20 ASSISTS 20

The first half between these two teams lived up to all expectations, especially offensively. They both shot at least 47 percent from the floor and 40 percent from 3-point range.

Back and forth they went, with Ohio State taking 20-12 lead after eight-and-a-half minutes passed behind six off-the-bench points from Zed Key. Yet a quick 10-0 Iowa run that concluded with Chris Holtmann calling a timeout after 71 seconds of action put the Hawkeyes up on top and set up a competitive stretch late in first half. Neither team had an edge greater than four points in the latter part of the opening half, and Iowa went into the locker room after 20 minutes maintaining a 45-42 advantage.

Three Iowa players – Luka Garza, Jordan Bohannon and Jack Nunge – each scored 11 points in the first half. Bohannon and Nunge combined to make six 3s. One of the bigger boosts for the Hawkeyes was the difference in fouls. They drew nine fouls compared to only three drawn fouls by the Buckeyes in the first half. That led to a 10-to-2 free-throw discrepancy as the teams regrouped in their respective locker rooms.

The Buckeyes got 10 first-half points from Justice Sueing. Duane Washington Jr. and E.J. Liddell added seven apiece, too. Meechie Johnson’s six points and Key’s six also helped the Buckeyes offensively.

Next up: Ohio State goes to College Park, Maryland, on Monday for its only game against the Terrapins (10-8, 4-7 Big Ten) of the regular season. It’ll tip off at 9 p.m. on FS1.

Other Notes

  • Chris Holtmann stuck with his starting five: Duane Washington Jr., Justin Ahrens, Justice Sueing, E.J. Liddell and Kyle Young. CJ Walker continued to come off the bench.
  • Ohio State was without two of its 13 scholarship players. Jimmy Sotos was ruled out for the season after tests on his shoulder separation showed he needs surgery, and Ibrahima Diallo remains out with a sprained MCL. Prior to the game, Holtmann referenced how he would have liked to have Diallo available for the matchup with Iowa’s frontcourt.
  • Iowa didn’t have starting guard CJ Frederick at its disposal. The team’s fourth-leading scorer (8.7 points per game) was ruled out with a lower-leg injury. He’s a 50-percent 3-point shooter.
  • This was Young’s 100th career game as a Buckeye. The senior forward has averaged eight points and 5.9 rebounds in 19 minutes per game across his four-year career.
  • The Buckeyes entered the day trailing 79-76 in the overall series with the Hawkeyes, and they were behind 51-25 coming into Thursday when playing in Iowa City.

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Rochester mother of 9-year-old handcuffed and pepper-sprayed notified city and police department she intends to sue

A notice of claim states that the girl’s mother, Elba Pope, will seek damages due to “mental anguish and psychological/emotional distress and trauma” and “physical injury and substantial pain,” as well as coverage for any future required medical treatment and mental health care.

Pope’s daughter ran out of the house in distress because she “was upset about her mother and step-father arguing,” the notice, which CNN obtained from family attorney Lorenzo Napolitano, says.

Pope explicitly accused the officers of “wanton, reckless and malicious” conduct and is claiming “negligence, violation of state and federal constitutional rights, infliction of emotional distress, assault, battery, excessive force, false arrest, (and) false imprisonment,” though she did not limit the scope of the claim to those allegations, the notice says.

Before a person files a lawsuit for damages against a city, New York law requires the plaintiff to prepare and serve a formal notice explaining the nature of the claim.

Pope claims in the notice that she tried to bring her daughter home, but that police “intervened and stopped” her. The notice states that police didn’t tell Pope about the officers’ use of pepper spray and handcuffing or the struggle her daughter had with police officers that was recorded by police body cameras.

“No 9-year-old should be handcuffed. No 9-year-old should be pepper-sprayed. No one’s humanity should be dismissed because of a badge. No human should be treated like this,” Napolitano said in a statement. “Reform is needed. Reform can come, but only if we are willing to listen to this little girl crying out for the protection that she didn’t receive from the Rochester Police.”

One officer involved has been suspended and two were placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of an internal investigation, a Tuesday statement from Rochester Chief of Police Cynthia Herriott-Sullivan said. Rochester Mayor Lovely Warren condemned the incident on Monday, calling it “simply horrible.”

CNN has reached out to the Rochester Police Department and the mayor for comment on the notice of claim.

Family trouble call

The officers responded to what police called a report of “family trouble” and the ensuing encounter has been sharply criticized by city and state officials. The incident has led to protests in the community.

Two body camera videos of the January 29 encounter show officers restraining the child, putting her in handcuffs and attempting to get her inside the back of a police vehicle as she repeatedly cries and calls for her father.

At one point, one officer says, “You’re acting like a child.”

“I am a child!” the girl responds.

A female officer is seen talking to the girl later in the video, eventually saying, “This is your last chance, otherwise pepper spray’s going in your eyeballs.” About a minute later, another officer can be heard saying, “Just spray her at this point.” The female officer is seen shaking a can that appears to be pepper spray and the child continues to scream.

The girl was transported to Rochester General Hospital and later released, according to police.

The incident has been compared to the death of Daniel Prude, a Black man who died in March after Rochester police pinned him to the ground and placed a hood over his head as he experienced a mental health crisis.
The police body camera footage of that incident, released in August after city officials intentionally delayed its release, led to protests over the police’s treatment of Black people and those experiencing mental health crises. Warren later fired the police chief, saying there was a “pervasive problem” in the police department.

At a news conference Sunday, Herriott-Sullivan said the treatment of the girl was not acceptable.

“I’m not going to stand here and tell you that for a 9-year-old to have to be pepper-sprayed is OK. It’s not,” she said. “I don’t see that as who we are as a department, and we’re going to do the work we have to do to ensure that these kinds of things don’t happen.”

Warren said the girl reminded her of her own young daughter.

Monday, New York state Sen. Samra Brouk and Assemblyman Demond Meeks, both Democrats, introduced legislation that would prohibit police use of chemical agents against minors in the state, according to a statement.

“The harrowing experience endured by a nine-year-old girl in our community — including being handcuffed and pepper sprayed — should never happen to another child,” Brouk said in a statement. “This legislation will ensure that when a child is in crisis, they will never again be met with such violence in the form of pepper spray or other chemical irritants.”

New York Attorney General Letitia James tweeted Monday that her office is looking into the incident as well. She called the incident “deeply disturbing and wholly unacceptable.”

Police have not identified the officers involved in the incident or the child.

CNN has not been able to verify with authorities or family members the race of the 9-year-old.

CNN’s Ray Sanchez, Mirna Alsharif, Laura James, Eric Levenson, Saffeya Ahmed, Sarah Jorgensen, Jessica Prater, Kristina Sgueglia and Hollie Silverman contributed to this report.

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CHIEFS KINGDOM — Former Kansas City Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer moved to hospice facility

STRIKE TO TYREEK HILL IN THE 4TH QUARTER, SET UP THE FIRST OF THREE TOUCHDOWNS THE CHIEFS SCORED IN THE FINAL QUARTER TO BEAT THE 49ERS. THERE IS ALSO SOME SAD NEWS WE WANT TO PASS ALONG TO CHIEFS KINGDOM TONIGHT. FORMER CHIEFS HEAD COACH MARTY SCHOTTENHEIMER HAS BEEN MOVED TO A HOSPICE FACILITY. HIS FAMILY SAYS HE MOVED TO THE FACILITY NEAR HIS HOME IN CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA WHERE HE IS LISTED IN STABLE CONDITION FOLLOWING COMPLICATIONS FROM ALZHEIMER’S. HIS FAMILY RELEASED A STATEMENT SAYING IN PART, AS A FAMILY WE ARE SURROUNDING HIM WITH LOVE AND ARE SOAKING UP THE PRAYERS AND SUPPORT FROM ALL THOSE HE IMPACTED THROUGH HIS INCREDIBLE LIFE. IN THE WAY HE TAUGHT US, WE ARE PUTTING ONE FOOT IN FRONT OF THE OTHER ONE PLAY AT A TIME. WITH THE CHIEFS, SCHOTTENHEIMER MADE AN APPEARANCE IN AFC CHAMPIONSHIP GAME IN 1993, BUT LOST TO THE BUFFALO BI

Former Kansas City Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer moved to hospice facility

Schottenheimer – a member of the Chiefs Hall of Fame and coach in Kansas City from 1989 to 1998 – was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2014

Former Kansas City Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer has been moved into a hospice facility, according to a statement released by the Schottenheimer family to ESPN NFL reporter Chris Mortensen.Schottenheimer – a member of the Chiefs Hall of Fame and coach in Kansas City from 1989 to 1998 – was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2014. He was moved into a hospice facility near his home in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Jan. 30. The statement said he is listed in stable condition following complications from his disease. His family asked for privacy at this time.“As a family, we are surrounding him with love, and are soaking up the prayers and support from all those he impacted through his incredible life,” Pat Schottenheimer, his wife, said in the statement. “In the way he taught us all, we are putting one foot in front of the other… one play at a time.”In 10 full seasons, Schottenheimer went 101-58-1 during the regular season — good for an amazing 63% win percentage. Schottenheimer went 3-7 in another 10 playoff games, including a memorable run in 1993 that ended in the AFC championship game.Related video: Video above is from after the 2020 Super Bowl.

Former Kansas City Chiefs coach Marty Schottenheimer has been moved into a hospice facility, according to a statement released by the Schottenheimer family to ESPN NFL reporter Chris Mortensen.

Schottenheimer – a member of the Chiefs Hall of Fame and coach in Kansas City from 1989 to 1998 – was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s in 2014. He was moved into a hospice facility near his home in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Jan. 30.

The statement said he is listed in stable condition following complications from his disease. His family asked for privacy at this time.

“As a family, we are surrounding him with love, and are soaking up the prayers and support from all those he impacted through his incredible life,” Pat Schottenheimer, his wife, said in the statement. “In the way he taught us all, we are putting one foot in front of the other… one play at a time.”

In 10 full seasons, Schottenheimer went 101-58-1 during the regular season — good for an amazing 63% win percentage. Schottenheimer went 3-7 in another 10 playoff games, including a memorable run in 1993 that ended in the AFC championship game.

Related video: Video above is from after the 2020 Super Bowl.

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Bushfire smoke blankets Australian city under COVID-19 lockdown

SYDNEY, Feb 3 (Reuters) – Smoke haze covered Australia’s fourth largest city of Perth on Wednesday from a fast-moving bushfire that razed dozens of homes, complicating a tight lockdown after Western Australia state’s first COVID-19 case in more than 10 months.

Authorities said the hot, dry conditions that had fuelled the fires in Perth’s northeastern suburbs had eased slightly overnight.

“We had a better night than the previous night, we haven’t had the fire impact any properties overnight and also some milder conditions have allowed us to complete some tracking,” state Fire Services Commissioner Darren Klemm told reporters.

Klemm revised up the number of homes lost from the fires to 71 from 59 while urging residents to remain vigilant as erratic winds could reignite some fires. No fatalities have been reported from the fires, the origins of which are still unknown.

“It is going to continue to be a challenging fire for us for at least the next three or four or five days,” Klemm said.

However, favourable weather could bring some respite with rains possible over the weekend and temperatures expected to drop to around 28 degree Celsius (82 degree Fahrenheit) over the next few days from the mid-30s, authorities said.

A tropical low in the state’s north has brought heavy rains and gusty winds there and the system could move south bringing wet weather over the next few days, Australia’s Bureau of Meteorology said.

Two million residents of Perth, the state capital, are under a five-day lockdown until Friday after a hotel quarantine worker tested positive to the highly contagious variant of COVID-19 first detected in Britain.

Residents must stay home, except for essential work, healthcare, grocery shopping or exercise, with visits to hospitals and nursing homes banned.

But state authorities said fire evacuation orders will take precedence over COVID-19 lockdown rules and residents should plan to shift to alternative places if emergency evacuation orders are issued.

“What we don’t want is indecision from people about whether they should evacuate or not when we require them to evacuate, so that evacuation overrides any quarantining requirements that people may have,” Klemm said. (Reporting by Renju Jose; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)

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NYC Weather: More snow expected as marathon nor’easter slams New York City and the Tri-State

NEW YORK (WABC) — More snow is expected to fall Tuesday across the Tri-State area after New York City experienced its snowiest day in five years while parts of New Jersey topped 2 feet.

More than a foot of snow fell in Central Park Monday, in a snow storm that made the top 20 for New York City and one of the biggest ever for parts of northern New Jersey.

The relentless storm piled on 3 inches of snow an hour at times while wicked wind gusts caused blowing snow that limited visibility and drifts that buried parked cars to their windows.

RELATED: Snowfall totals around New York and the Tri-State area

The same areas that were hit hard earlier Monday will tack on even more snow — including areas of Northern Jersey, Westchester and Rockland County.

Meteorologist Lee Goldberg says expect waves of light to moderate snow Tuesday. It’ll start out as an early morning mix and then be met by colder air that turns into snow Tuesday evening through Wednesday morning.

Blowing and drifting will continue as winds stay gusty in the 30-35 mph range. The event could well last 48 hours, making it a rare snowstorm the likes of which we see every five to 10 years, ABC7 meteorologist Jeff Smith said.

Before it’s over, parts of New York City could see 18 inches of snow, with even higher amounts to the north and west as the heaviest snow shifts in that direction.

RELATED: School closings for New York, New Jersey and Connecticut

The winter storm warning continues on Tuesday as the storm slowly pulls away. It’ll still be blustery and chilly. Additional significant accumulation is not likely during the day Tuesday, but don’t be surprised to see a few more inches before the storm finally departs.

The snow itself will likely remain fluffy throughout the event, because it’s so cold, but could become wetter and heavier in coastal airs that see mixing.

Coastal areas will also have to contend with the risk of flooding from the powerhouse storm, with flood warnings in effect on Long Island until 3 a.m. Tuesday. These areas face a risk of moderate coastal flooding, but some areas could see major flooding.

There were also concerns that high tide could bring widespread moderate to isolated major flooding in vulnerable areas, areas like Freeport and Lindenhurst on Long Island and the South Shore back bays. The storm’s slow-moving nature will encompass several high-tide cycles, adding to the concerns.

RELATED: Live winter storm updates from around the Tri-State

Stay with the AccuWeather team for continuing updates.

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Kansas City Chiefs place Demarcus Robinson, Daniel Kilgore on reserve/COVID-19 list

The Kansas City Chiefs have placed wide receiver Demarcus Robinson and backup center Daniel Kilgore on the reserve/COVID-19 list due to close contact.

The roster moves mark the first coronavirus-related issues ahead of Sunday’s Super Bowl.

If they are officially designated only as close contacts, Robinson and Kilgore could play in Super Bowl LV against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers if they have five consecutive days of negative tests.

“The NFL has done a great job with it, presenting different safety things for the players to stay as safe as possible,” Chiefs coach Andy Reid said Monday. “We’ve been hammering this point home forever. The problem is you’re fighting the invisible man. It just gets you when least expected, and we’re seeing that in everything. It’s an unfortunate thing.”

Robinson, 26, had a career-high 45 receptions for 466 yards and three touchdowns this season.

Kilgore, 33, appeared in seven games — including four starts — this season, his first with the Chiefs. The 10-year veteran is listed as Kansas City’s backup center behind Austin Reiter.

“These guys were being as safe as they could be,” Reid said, “and we’ll just see how it goes. But the league has built-in rules and regulations, so we follow those, and it’ll all work out. It’ll all work out for them when it’s all said and done.”

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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New York City state of emergency due to snowstorm, schools move to all-remote learning

NEW YORK CITY (WABC) — New York City Mayor de Blasio has declared a state of emergency, including restricting all non-essential travel, as of 6 a.m. Monday.

The following categories are exempt from these restrictions:
Public transit workers
First responders
Healthcare and homecare workers
Police officers
Peace officers
Any other workers engaged in vital City services
Delivery of food, medical supplies, or fuel
News media
Hotel workers
Homeless shelter and outreach workers
Utility workers performing emergency repairs
Persons employed by pharmacies, grocery stores (including all food and beverage stores), convenience stores, bodegas, gas stations, laundromats, hotels, restaurants/bars, and hardware stores
Individuals seeking medical treatment or medical supplies
For-hire vehicles, used to transport persons employed to perform any of these services to and from their places of employment

The mayor warned New Yorkers to refrain from travel as the storm’s intensity worsens.

715 salt spreaders, 2000 plows are at the ready to clear roadways with an additional 120 plows to join the fleet from other city agencies.

Starting on Saturday, over 500 miles of roadway were brined & pretreated by city sanitation.

All New York City students will move to remote learning on Monday because of the winter storm. As for Tuesday, de Blasio says no decision has been made yet.

Food distribution will be canceled at schools as well as the learning bridges childcare program for Monday.

All Catholic Elementary Schools in the Archdiocese of New York, will be closed Monday, February 1, due to the expected major snow storm. Monday will be a “traditional snow day” with no remote instruction. All Catholic schools have snow days built into their calendars with contingencies for making up instruction time.

Archdiocese High Schools operate independently, so high school families need to follow instructions from their individual schools.

Monday’s COVID vaccine appointments will be rescheduled because of the impending snow storm.

“Last thing we want to do is to urge our seniors to come out in the middle of a storm like this,” de Blasio said at a Sunday morning press conference. “It doesn’t make sense.”

Alternate side parking for Monday and Tuesday have been canceled. The mayor says the open restaurants/open streets program on Monday night is also canceled.

A hazardous travel advisory will go into effect for Monday and Tuesday.

DSNY has been split into 2- 12-hour shifts to work around the clock. The city has over 270,000 tons of salt and 320,000 gallons of calcium chloride on hand.

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Kansas City Chiefs’ Andy Reid disappointed for Eric Bieniemy, happy for David Culley in NFL coach hiring

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas City Chiefs coach Andy Reid expressed disappointment that offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy was passed over for an NFL head coach opening for the third straight year.

“I’m glad I have him [for at least another season], but I’m not so glad I have him,” Reid said Thursday after the Chiefs began practice for Super Bowl LV against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. “I was really hoping he would have an opportunity to take one of these jobs. You guys know what I think of him. I think he’s great. I think he would be great for any number of teams that opened up and help them win football games and also develop men into men. I just think he’s a great person.”

Bieniemy, in his third season as the Chiefs’ coordinator, interviewed for six head coach openings this year. He also interviewed for multiple openings in each of the previous two years.

One of Reid’s former assistants, David Culley, did land a head-coaching job with the Houston Texans. Culley coached for Reid for 18 seasons, including from 2013 through 2016 with the Chiefs as wide receivers coach.

“David will do a good job,” Reid said. “He’s a people person. He’ll bring energy to the building. One of the most loyal guys I’ve ever been around. He’s a great person. We were together 18 years. We had a few cheeseburgers together.”

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