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Wednesday, September 30, 2020

Edison Elementary expansion project complete, alleviates overcrowding - WGEM

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As kids return to class, they have more space and more resources to work with after the expansion project is finally complete.

A number of upgrades are now complete at Edison Elementary. School officials said these upgrades put an end to a long-time overcrowding problem.

The halls in Edison Elementary look different.

"The new upgrades have been great," 6th grade teacher Marcy Lantz said.

Several teachers are working in new and improved classrooms and there's a new cafeteria and courtyard to accomodate more students.

This comes after an expansion plan promised to alleviate overcrowding throughout the building.

"We've settled in nicely and we really enjoyed the new spaces," Lantz said. "We love the court yard. That has been a fantastic addition for us."

Macomb school officials said they can now eliminate trailers outside the building, that they were using as classrooms.

"There was four classrooms that were outside in modulars that had been there for quite some time, the fact that they get to move into classrooms is a welcome addition," Lantz said.

On Wednesday, school district officials toured the school, which now has six new bathrooms, new playground space and a tornado safe room.

"It's wonderful to have the space," Edison principal Kellee Sullivan said. "We were also able to add two intervention rooms that help with student learning. Those teachers have a specific space for themselves and small groups of kids."

School officials said students learn better when they have more space.

"Classrooms are nice size, so students are able to spread out or eventually work in small groups again," Sullivan said.

"I think just that fact that they got to come to school and it was something new and exciting and they were super excited just to see all the changes, they've really enjoyed all of that," Lantz said.

Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, school officials said the new space also allows them to better social distance all students.

This expansion project is part of a six million dollar school upgrade project that also includes work at Macomb High School. The work at Edison costs about 4.4 million dollars of that. Last November, the district took out bonds to fund the project.

RELATED:

Work continues on Edison Elementary expansion project

Macomb school upgrades near complete, accommodate social distancing

Plans in place for Edison Elementary School expansion project

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Tucker Sits Back and Lets Multiple Guests Trash Fox Colleague Chris Wallace - The Daily Beast

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Fox News host Tucker Carlson didn’t say a critical word about his colleague Chris Wallace on Wednesday night, even as the Fox News anchor has taken a ton of heated criticism from right-wing pundits (and even some Fox News commentators) over their belief that Wallace treated President Donald Trump unfairly at Tuesday’s presidential debate.

Instead, the primetime conservative star sat back and let two of his favorite frequent guests trash his co-worker on air, saying nothing in return while nodding along silently.

The situation, meanwhile, recalled a similar incident last year which eventually resulted in the departure of longtime Fox News anchor Shepard Smith, who coincidentally debuted his new CNBC news show on Wednesday.

While a number of Fox News personalities took veiled shots at Wallace on Twitter over the way he moderated Tuesday’s off-the-rails debate, which featured the president steamrolling Wallace and constantly interrupting Joe Biden, criticism of the Fox News Sunday host had been largely absent from the network’s airwaves.

That was until Carlson’s program.

During his opening segment, the far-right host turned to conservative commentator Victor Davis Hanson to react to proposed changes to the upcoming debates in response to Tuesday’s debacle. At one point in a lengthy uninterrupted rant, Hanson took aim at Wallace for pressing Trump to condemn white supremacists and right-wing extremism.

“I would say if I could be a little more controversial, that I don’t like the format, this gotcha question,” Hanson said. “You know, getting on a horse and spurring them and then telling them you have two minutes to buck and then you’re going to stop them immediately.”

“If you’re going to incite a candidate then what do you expect,” he continued. “I mean, when you ask this question, ‘Didn’t you at Charlottesville say this,’ when he didn’t say it, and then he gets angry and you say, ‘Oh, two minutes, stop!’ You have to be absolutely symmetrical.”

Hanson went on the say the debate questions to Trump about white supremacy were “misrepresented” before adding that Wallace needed to also ask Biden about “the most recent controversial racial” comments made by Biden, namely his “You ain’t Black” controversy earlier this year.

Hanson wrapped up his point by grumbling about other questions he felt Trump was unfairly asked, specifically about whether he’d accept the results of the 2020 election.

“There wasn’t that symmetry and I think that marred the debate,” he concluded.

Towards the end of the program, Carlson brought on Mark Steyn to also discuss the debate. While Steyn isn’t a paid Fox News contributor, he has served as a guest host of Carlson’s show in the past and is a fixture of the program.

After grousing about debate moderators possibly having the ability to cut off debaters’ microphones in upcoming debates, Steyn then tossed some pointed insults Wallace’s way.

“Trump is brilliant at pithy responses—that’s what people remember,” Steyn declared. “So when Chris Wallace started whining that Trump was talking too much, Trump should have just given some of those 15-second answers. You know, like the climate change thing, nobody’s voting on climate change!”

Moments later, Steyn went after Wallace again.

“Sometimes righteous anger works,” he noted. “I don’t believe being told that you’ve got to condemn white supremacy is a good-faith question because it implies you somehow have been cozying up to it. It’s like, ‘When did you stop beating your wife?’”

Despite Steyn claiming Wallace had whined and asked bad-faith questions, Carlson offered nothing in response to those remarks or offered to stand up for his colleague.

This recalls the beginning of the on-air civil war that broke out between Carlson and Smith last year when Carlson allowed guest Joe diGenova to call Fox News senior judicial analyst Judge Andrew Napolitano a “fool” with no pushback, prompting Smith to call out diGenova. This resulted in Carlson mocking Smith that evening and bringing diGenova back to react.

Weeks later, Smith was out at Fox News.

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Badger State Trail bridge over Highway PD complete - WKOW

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FITCHBURG (WKOW) -- The city of Fitchburg completed a new bridge on the Badger State Trail that crosses over Highway PD.

The new bridge is part of the reconstruction of Highway PD (McKee Road).

Fitchburg Mayor Aaron Richardson says the project makes the area safer for bicyclists and drivers.

"This bridge enhances the safety for cyclists, because previously there was just a flashing light," Richardson said. "Bicyclists would have to stop, they'd push the button, lights would flash, cars would usually stop - but not always."

The new bridge is 121 feet long, and more than 19 feet wide.

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Charlottesville employee surprises colleague’s daughters with virtual school set-up in their office - WVIR

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“I want to challenge other businesses to do something special for one of their employees who might have kids who are going through virtual school,” she said. "It helps, not only the employee focus on business, but they’ve got their kids close at hand, they can answer questions.

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The Hotel Roanoke's renovations complete and open to public - WDBJ

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ROANOKE, Va. (WDBJ) - Some exciting new additions in The Hotel Roanoke are now open to the public. There’s an upgraded Pine Room Restaurant and a new 1882 Lobby Bar, both with outdoor seating options.

These spaces have been two years in the making. Construction started in the spring.

“We knew that to grow our conferencing business, we needed a space that could hold more attendees, and the Pine Room was fantastic. We maintained all those great elements of the Pine Room but added so much more," said Brian Wells, General Manager of The Hotel Roanoke and Conference Center.

Like the outdoor stone patio and expanded indoor seating area, and d then right off the lobby--you can have a cocktail at the 40-seat lobby bar during your stay.

“When you walk in, the optics, the appeal of the space is dramatic. We restored the ceiling to a pre-1939 condition, embracing history as well as some of the other panels in the space," Wells said.

And to top off this $3.6 million renovation are all the new menu options.

“We’re doing a lot of local and we’re doing a lot of scratch cooking, and I think it all ties into the American rustic-type theme that we’re talking about and that we’re going for,” Stephen DeMarco, Executive Chef of The Hotel Roanoke, said.

“We’ve been talking about this for a long time, and just to see it come to fruition, and the gorgeous space and the hard work we put into it and it’s finally here, and it’s like a nervous anxiousness and excitement, it’s everything," DeMarco said.

The grand opening of the new additions will include live entertainment on Friday and Saturday nights up until Thanksgiving.

Copyright 2020 WDBJ. All rights reserved.

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Charlie Carver Says a Gay Colleague Slapped Him for Being 'Too Effeminate' - Just Jared

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Charlie Carver is speaking out.

The 32-year-old Boys in the Band actor opened up in an interview with Variety.

PHOTOS: Check out the latest pics of Charlie Carver

In the piece, he opened up about an experience at an Emmys party five years ago, where an unnamed gay man he worked with chastised him three separate times for acting too effeminate.

“I was told that I needed to ‘get it under control’ around people in the business,” he revealed.

While waiting at the valet, he ran into the co-worker again and asked him for clarification. Instead, the man slapped Charlie across the face.

“It wasn’t playful but intentional, pointed and meant to be instructive. A slap. I told him that if he ever touched me again, I would name him,” he went on to say.

“That was the moment when I said to myself, ‘I can’t do this. I cannot police myself in that way.’”

If you haven’t seen it yet, watch the trailer for Netflix’s Boys in the Band.

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Trump Often Gives 'Complete Opposite' Of Health Experts' Advice, Former Staffer Says - NPR

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Olivia Troye, U.S. Vice President Mike Pence's top coronavirus advisor at the time, participates in a coronavirus disease briefing event with the Vice President at 3M's company headquarters in Maplewood, Minn. in March. Jeff Mason/Reuters

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President Trump has consistently told Americans "the complete opposite" of what his health experts have been telling him in private meetings about COVID-19, according to Olivia Troye, who until recently worked on the the White House coronavirus task force.

"They brief him. They tell him the facts. They're telling him the truth. They're telling him things that need to be done," Troye said in an interview with NPR's Ari Shapiro. "And it is a very frustrating environment to work in, when you know that the message that is going to be relayed is counter to what you just told him."

Troye, who worked for Vice President Mike Pence for two years as a special adviser for homeland security and counterterrorism issues, says the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention often faced two challenges: coping with a massive coronavirus outbreak in the U.S., and navigating political interference as the agency sought to protect the American people.

CDC Director Robert Redfield has faced "very challenging dynamics" from the White House, Troye said, "at times when you're changing the wording and guidances to fit a narrative, to play down the severity of the virus or cases."

Her former colleagues at the CDC "went back and forth with a number of entities in the White House that wanted specific language included in guidances," Troye said, "that they did not believe was factually correct and didn't represent the data that they were seeing."

Troye decided to speak out after resigning from her post in August. The White House has described her as someone who was fired and is now disgruntled — a claim Troye denies.

Troye made headlines earlier this month when she was featured in an online attack ad from the advocacy group Republican Voters Against Trump, saying that Trump's biggest concern about the global pandemic was its potential to hurt his reelection chances, rather than its toll on the American people.

In that ad, Troye said that as early as February, the Trump administration "knew it wasn't a matter of if COVID would become a big pandemic her in the United States, it was a matter of when."

But the president was not open to hearing such predictions, Troye says. As the country faced what could be the biggest pandemic in living memory, she said, "the president did a great disservice" to members of his own government who were trying to manage the crisis.

"Starting from calling it a hoax, to telling Americans this wasn't real and perpetuating false narratives — that was dangerous," Troye said. "It had a significant impact on how Americans would perceive the information coming out of the White House."

Troye appeared in the anti-Trump ad days before the U.S. hit a grim milestone of 200,000 deaths from COVID-19 — the most in the world. Despite having less than 5% of the global population, the U.S. has suffered more than 20% of COVID-19 deaths worldwide.

The president's false and misleading claims about the coronavirus have not let up as the November vote approaches, Troye warns.

"It's increasingly disturbing to me that as we get closer to the election, this rhetoric continues to ramp up," she said, citing Trump's comments that contradict experts' analysis of U.S. case numbers and promote some ideas that she says are simply dangerous.

"The day the president suggested people inject themselves with bleach was shocking," Troye said. But she notes Trump has also rejected an essential tool in fighting the coronavirus: a face mask.

"There were numerous discussions on ways that we were going to slow the spread of the virus with the mask being the most basic critical aspect of it," Troye said. "We knew that it spread through aerosol early on. There were a lot of unknowns about the virus, but we knew that wearing a mask was going to be critical."

Wearing a face mask was seen as something every American could do to to help quash the virus. But Trump did not wear one in public until July 11 — four months after the pandemic was declared. Since then, he has been sharply criticized for not modeling safe behavior by consistently wearing a mask.

The president's example not to wear a mask at public events set the tone in the White House, Troye said.

"Even in the West Wing, it was sort of, you were looked down upon when you would walk by with a mask," she said, referring to the building that houses administration offices.

When asked how Trump might have undermined the fight against COVID-19, Troye said the president failed to provide leadership.

"I think when you're the president of the United States, what you say to the American populace, especially during a time of crisis, really matters. People are listening. People are looking for comfort as well. People are looking for leadership."

Troye describes herself as a lifelong Republican, but she says she will vote for Democratic candidate Joe Biden this fall, citing what she calls a critical moment in U.S. history.

"I think it's country over party right now for me, and what I've seen in the past two years of my tenure in the White House has been upsetting," she says. "I think that we need to get to a point where we steer our country back to a sense of normalcy, a sense of who we have been in the past."

Trump, she said, "will not lead us in that direction."

Troye left her White House job in August, an exit she describes as a voluntary resignation. But after Troye went public with sharp criticisms of Trump earlier this month, administration officials responded with an attack of their own.

"Olivia Troye worked for me. I fired her," said retired Lt. Gen. Keith Kellogg, the national security adviser to the vice president. Alleging that Troye's job performance had declined, Kellogg added, "I'm the one that escorted her off the compound."

Kellogg made those remarks at a White House briefing in which he also said he never heard Trump say the things Troye claimed.

"I'm very proud of the task force and the work it's done," Kellogg said. "I am not proud of Olivia Troye."

Responding to ­Kellogg, Troye said via Twitter, "Sad that Gen. Kellogg is telling a bald faced lie to protect the President. I resigned on my own accord & was asked to stay. He never escorted me out. He knows this. I wrote a note thanking all the colleagues who had worked so hard with me in spite of POTUS & I stand by that."

She also posted an image of a commemorative coin Kellogg gave her upon her exit, linking to a social media post in which Troye had spoken warmly of the retired general.

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Tow-truck drivers pay tribute to young colleague killed in rollover (8 photos) - OrilliaMatters

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Friends, family and dozens of fellow tow-truck drivers gathered at the Innisfil ONroute, Wednesday, to mourn the death of Devon King, the 21-year-old man who died in hospital following Monday's vehicle rollover on Highway 400. 

A makeshift memorial dedicated to the Newmarket man has been set near the scene of the deadly wreck. 

King, who was driving the truck and wasn't wearing a seatbelt, was ejected from the vehicle and landed on the grass following Monday's crash, which happened shortly before 8:30 a.m. 

Earlier this week, police said King lost control of the vehicle while trying to make a lane change and get into the ONroute facility where it entered the ditch and flipped. 

King’s girlfriend, 28-year-old Sara Avila of Wasaga Beach, was a passenger in the vehicle when the crash happened. She was wearing her seatbelt and sustained minor injuries. 

Avila told BarrieToday that, if nothing else, she wants people to know that he thought of her in that split-second moment.

“He stuck his arm across the seat and held me back as best he could,” she said, tears streaming down her face. “My face bounced once off the dash, but it may have been much worse.

"He is my hero and I miss him so much.”

Avila said she and King had been together for about a year. Just this past week, she had professed how deeply she loved him.

“There was a seven-year difference between us and he was always trying to prove he was mature enough to be with me," she said. "I realized this past few weeks just how much I loved him and now I’ve lost him. I hope he can see how many people loved him here today.”

More than 100 tow-truck drivers made the trek to the Innisfil ONroute parking lot — many representing several different companies and from as far away as Brampton — to pay their respects. 

Taylor Sowerby, who works for Luxury Towing out of Richmond Hill, said King was one of his best friends.

Sowerby told BarrieToday that he had talked to King not long before the crash, as they were going to “meet up for a coffee and a smoke” before starting their shifts Monday morning. 

“He was a jokester, always trying to put a smile on everyone’s faces,” Sowerby said. “Even with the dark skies we’re having, with COVID-19 being here and it being slow across the board for everyone, he would try and make every driver laugh as best he could.”

Sowerby and others erected a makeshift memorial on the grass at the Innisfil ONroute, which is located in the southbound lanes of Highway 400, just a few minutes south of Barrie. 

Acting Sgt. Dan Hunter, with the OPP's Highway Safety Division, said on Monday that the preliminary investigation had revealed that the driver was not wearing a seatbelt. Neither speed nor drugs or alcohol was a factor in the crash, he said 

King lost control while trying to make a lane change to get into the ONroute facility, where the truck entered the ditch and flipped.

“It was just a lane change and a loss of control," Hunter said. 

Jason Coward was the second person on the scene after the crash. Although Coward said he didn’t know King well, he tried to comfort the injured young man until paramedics arrived.

“When I saw him lying there, I knew it wasn’t good," Coward told BarrieToday. "I just told him to stay calm and that help was coming, but he was having a really hard time breathing and was in rough shape. He stopped breathing a couple of times and then came back around.

"It's really sad to hear that he’s gone," he added. 

A tow-truck driver himself, Coward was in a crash several years ago and says he often hears the negative things people say about the workers in the industry. But he hopes they also remember who they call when they need help on the roads.

“People talk s--t about us all the time, but we’re usually the first ones on the scene when they need assistance," he said. "What if it was your kid or your spouse who needed help? We’re here and we try to help. It's dangerous out here.

"I got crushed at Essa Road eight years ago, spent a year and a half in a wheelchair and was told I wouldn’t walk again," Coward added. "Two years ago, I got back to work because I love this job and I love helping people so they’re not stranded in the middle of nowhere.”

Sowerby echoed those sentiments and hopes people have some compassion instead of being judgmental.

“At the end of the day, this is somebody’s son, a friend of mine and a brother to everyone here,” Sowerby said. “We’re not out here to blow through stop signs, blow across highways or out here being gangster like everyone paints us out to be. We’re out here doing our job in our trucks — our office — to make sure people are alive and get home OK.

“That's what Devon was doing and he wasn’t speeding or being reckless," he added. "It was an accident; they happen whether we like it or not. He was a good guy and I hope he is looking down at how loved he was and how a part of the industry he was.”

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Debate fallout: Moderator Chris Wallace slammed by critics and Fox News colleagues - The Mercury News

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(AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)
Moderator Chris Wallace speaks as Donald Trump and Joe Biden face off in the first presidential debate Tuesday night.

Tuesday night’s chaotic presidential debate between Donald Trump and Joe Biden has been described as, among other things, a “hot mess” and a “travesty,” and some of the blame is landing on moderator Chris Wallace.

“Chris Wallace failed to meet the moment,” wrote CNN media reporter Oliver Darcy after Tuesday’s free-for-all. “… (He) does ultimately bear responsibility for the circus that aired on national TV. He lost control of the debate early, and failed to ever regain order. …”

Wallace even took knocks from some of his colleagues at Fox News. However, they criticized him not for his inability to exert control over the proceedings, but for what they saw as a bias for Biden.

“Trump is debating the moderator and Biden,” Fox News’ Laura Ingraham tweeted.

Fox News host Greg Gutfeld apparently agreed with Ingraham, re-tweeting multiple comments about Trump being forced to take on two foes — a stance that Trump, not surprisingly, agreed with.

“Chris had a tough night,” the president tweeted. “Two on one was not surprising, but fun. …”

Many media outlets, meanwhile, pointed out that Wallace repeatedly tried to gain control of the debate, but struggled to do so.

Associated Press media writer David Bauder wrote that, for much of the night, “Wallace looked like a man trying to stop a runaway train with his bare hands.” And late-night television host Trevor Noah quipped on Twitter that, “Wallace’s debate performance tonight is a great reminder that kindergarten teachers are underpaid.”

In defense of Wallace, he did stand up to the candidates — mostly Trump — several times. When, for example, the president complained that only he was being reprimanded for talking over Biden’s answers, Wallace shot back: “Frankly, you have been doing more interrupting.”

Standing up for the besieged moderator, Politico’s Tim Alberta tweeted: “You can nit-pick questions/phrasing from Chris Wallace, but he did a helluva job under the circumstances. Nobody has ever — ever — drawn an assignment like that. He couldn’t play interviewer because he had to play referee. (And yes, the questions/phrasing suffered as a result.)”

And Wallace did get some sympathy from Fox News colleague, Geraldo Rivera.

“The guy signed up to moderate a debate,” Rivera said, “and he ended up trying to referee a knife fight.”

On Wednesday the Commission on Presidential Debates released a statement defending the moderator, saying it “is grateful to Chris Wallace for the professionalism and skill he brought to last night’s debate …”

Also, the Commission promised structural changes for the upcoming debates, “to ensure a more orderly discussion of the issues,” but did not specify what those changes might include. After Tuesday’s chaotic affair, many viewers and members of the media suggested that the moderator should have the ability to mute the microphone of a candidate who interrupts and/or exceeds his time limit.

Whatever happens from here on out, it’s becoming clear that being a presidential debate moderator ranks right up there with Academy Awards host on the list of television’s most thankless jobs.

And as longtime political pundit James Carville insisted during a segment on MSNBC, “Chris Wallace should get combat pay. … This was not a very good night for American democracy.”

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Lakers vs. Heat: Complete NBA Finals preview coverage - Los Angeles Times

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The Los Angeles Lakers are back in the NBA Finals for the first time since Kobe Bryant led the franchise to its 16th title. Los Angeles Times sportswriters Tania Ganguli, Broderick Turner and Dan Woike discuss the Lakers’ chances to bring home the championship.

The Los Angeles Lakers play the Miami Heat in the NBA Finals beginning Wednesday night. Here is the L.A. Times’ preview coverage.

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Chesapeake Bay paddler Chris Hopkinson overcomes rough conditions to complete 200-mile trip for oyster recovery - Baltimore Sun

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Unfortunately, our website is currently unavailable in most European countries. We are engaged on the issue and committed to looking at options that support our full range of digital offerings to the EU market. We continue to identify technical compliance solutions that will provide all readers with our award-winning journalism.

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Construction complete on state-of-the-art observatory near Dahlonega Campus - News at UNG

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University of North Georgia (UNG) President Bonita Jacobs stared in awe at the 28-inch telescope atop a huge concrete pedestal that will allow students to look closely at the moon, planets and deep space objects.

"It exceeded my expectations," Jacobs said. "It is remarkable. I can envision the research and instruction that will take place and know how valuable it will be for generations of students to come."

Jacobs and a small group of UNG faculty, staff and students toured the freshly completed North Georgia Astronomical Observatory as part of its ribbon-cutting ceremony Sept. 25. UNG limited the number of participants to follow guidelines related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Construction of the single-level 3,200-square-foot building ended in August following several weather delays. Inclement weather also prohibited attendees from looking through the two telescopes permanently onsite. Both are housed inside domes that rotate and open, allowing visitors, students and researchers to peer into the night sky.

2020-09-25-Observatory 1

UNG President Bonita Jacobs and a small group of faculty and staff examine the 28-inch telescope at the North Georgia Astronomical Observatory.

The state-of-the-art telescopes and domes mark significant upgrades to the previous aging observatory.  According to Ken Crowe, assistant vice president of facilities at UNG, the previous facility was built 25 years ago when UNG had a student population of 2,000 to 3,000.

"The building had outgrown its functionality," he said, adding the new observatory is a huge improvement. "The difference between the old building and the new building could be compared to going from Little League baseball to the Major Leagues."

Dr. Gregory Feiden, observatory director and assistant professor of physics and astronomy at UNG, is excited about the opportunities the new facility will offer to students.

"The new facility is similar to a professional observatory," he said. "Our students will learn how to use our two telescopes, our suite of instruments, and how to collect and analyze data."

Dr. John Leyba, dean of the College of Science & Mathematics, said the facility and its state-of-the-art electronics will allow students to gain research experience at UNG instead of traveling to other sites.

"There is much more capability for our faculty and students to do fundamental research here compared to our previous observatory," he said.

Research projects will be enhanced because of the telescopes that measure at 24 and 28 inches across in the primary mirror diameter. Feiden explained the telescopes will allow students to conduct different tasks at the same time.

"The 28-inch telescope is multipurpose," he said. "Two instruments can be mounted simultaneously, making it is easy to switch between the two."

For example, an eyepiece can attach to one side and a camera can attach to the other. This will allow the viewer to look through the telescope and capture that image with a camera.

The 24-inch telescope does not have that dual option, making it ideal for teaching and research.

"The 28-inch telescope is easily accessible, including to people in wheelchairs," Feiden said. "So we will use it for public viewings."

While the observatory is designed for public access, the COVID-19 pandemic means the facility remains closed to the public until further notice.

Feiden said once the facility is open educational events will be scheduled inside and outside and use all of the observatory's amenities. For example, LCD screens mounted in the classroom can display a live feed from the telescope while experts conduct lectures or other activities.

Outside the building, a large flat area can accommodate amateur astronomers and their own telescopes to view the night sky. Outdoor electrical outlets have been installed to power telescopes.

A turnaround for school buses was supplied to help support future field trips to the observatory.

"We have a list of programs we can't wait to start," Feiden said, acknowledging they must be put on hold for now. "So, stay tuned."

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Finnish PM to stand-in for Swedish colleague at EU Summit - WBNG-TV

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HELSINKI (AP) — Sweden’s Prime Minister Stefan Lofven won’t be at Thursday’s European Union summit meeting as he will be attending his mother’s funeral, so he will be represented by his counterpart from neighboring Finland. Prime Minister Sanna Marin of Finland will represent the Swedish government at the Oct. 1-2 summit where only heads of state and government participate, Lofven told Sweden’s TT news agency. Sweden’s EU affairs minister Hans Dahlgren also will be present in Brussels, the agency added. EU leaders at the summit are to discuss relations with Turkey and China, the political upheaval in Belarus and the poisoning of Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny. 

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Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Care worker accused of yelling at and intimidating colleague awarded $30000 - New Zealand Herald

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A care worker accused of intimidating and yelling at a colleague in earshot of a client has been awarded more than $30,000 in lost wages and compensation.

The Employment Relations Authority found care worker Todd Longson was unjustifiably dismissed by Insight NZ which provides residential care for people with intellectual disabilities.

Longson was awarded $15,000 in compensation for the dismissal and $16,750 in lost wages.

The alleged serious misconduct related to an incident in November 2018 when Longson and his colleague Debbie Pedersen were doing the morning handover.

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According to Pedersen, Longson intimidated her by leaning over her, telling her to stop yelling and talking over her.

He closed the door of the room they were in and held it shut.

Pedersen said she felt unsafe especially in the small confined room.

When she left the room she saw the resident, who was the only other person at the property, was distressed.

The resident asked her "if Todd was being a dick again?"

Pederson said Longson leaned over her again later in the day when he returned to work, to talk about the morning incident.

Pederson said Longson had a history of intimidating behaviour.

Longson countered this claim and said there was a vendetta against him.

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Insight NZ did not accept that Longson was the victim of a vendetta but said: "when he does not like what he hears, he reacts by using his size and voice to shout over the top and drown out the message and intimidate to achieve his own way."

It considered this was deliberate and calculated or showed a complete lack of self-awareness that was damaging to the workplace environment.

In it's evidence to the ERA Insight NZ said Longson had difficulty taking instruction from women.

The ERA found that Longson's conduct on two occasions was "unacceptable" but "could not reasonably be considered serious misconduct" which would have entitled the company to terminate his employment without notice.

The authority said there was no warning given to Longson and concerns that Longson had difficulties taking instructions from women should have been raised through a performance appraisal process.

The intimidating effect experienced by colleagues and managers caused by Longson's size, tone, and mannerisms could also have been raised, the ERA said.

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"These steps could have maintained a productive employment relationship."

"The difficulty for Insight NZ is that a fair and reasonable employer could not have concluded that Longson's behaviour had become "unmanageable" so as to destroy the employment relationship," the ERA said in its report.

Longson said after he was dismissed from his job at Insight NZ he was too depressed to work for three or four months.

However, part of this was attributed to a back injury suffered in February 2019.

The ERA found there was a long-term financial impact for Longson stemming from his dismissal because he subsequently earned less from current permanent employment than at Insight NZ.

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Now Available: Drive-Thru Pre-Procedure COVID-19 Testing and Colleague Clearance Testing - LVHN News

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There’s nothing more convenient than a drive-thru. Now in addition to COVID-19 testing for symptomatic patients, Coordinated Health Bethlehem–Emrick Boulevard will offer pre-procedure and LVHN colleague clearance COVID-19 testing in a drive-thru format, located in the parking area to the rear of the building. Get your test– without ever leaving your car – and be on your way.

Colleague clearance testing

LVHN and Coordinated Health colleagues who require clearance testing can now receive COVID-19 testing at this location. Just bring your colleague ID and testing paperwork.COVID-19 pre-procedure testing

To promote patient safety, Lehigh Valley Health Network and Coordinated Health may require people who have an upcoming scheduled procedure to receive a COVID-19 test. Patients can now receive this test without an appointment at the Coordinated Health Bethlehem–Emrick Boulevard drive-thru. A doctor’s order is required for this type of test.

Other non-COVID-19 pre-procedure tests will not be provided at the Coordinated Health Bethlehem–Emrick Boulevard drive-thru. Patients can visit HNL Lab Medicine locations listed on the pre-procedure testing page to receive other pre-procedure tests and a COVID-19 test in one visit.

COVID-19 testing for people with symptoms

A doctor’s order is not required for patients experiencing COVID-19 symptoms. They should bring a photo ID to the testing site.

At this location, Northampton County residents with COVID-19 symptoms will have the cost of testing covered if they do not have health coverage. Tests are processed through HNL Lab Medicine, unless the patients’ insurance requires another lab.

Drive-thru COVID-19 testing hours

Monday, Wednesday, Friday: 10 a.m.–4 p.m.
Tuesday, Thursday: 12 p.m.–6 p.m.
Saturday: 9 a.m.–12 p.m.

COVID-19 test results

After a COVID-19 test, test results and quarantine instructions can be viewed on the MyLVHN patient portal. People who receive positive test results will receive a call with guidance. Should you have questions about your results, please call 484-273-4368.

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Fayette Co. School Board member calls for complete plan before return - WKYT

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LEXINGTON, Ky. (WKYT) - Fayette County School Board members say they want to see a clear, finalized plan for bringing students back for in-person learning.

But it seems like it will be at least a few more weeks before they’ll get it.

Monday night’s board meeting seemed to be full of questions from the board members themselves.

“To walk into a meeting where many of those folks who are doing this important, critical and difficult work on the ground, haven’t heard a lot of this stuff, that was troubling and concerning to me,” board member Tyler Murphy said.

Murphy says part of his frustration with that meeting was teachers weren’t consulted on a potential plan of action for bringing students back for in-person learning.

“They work with our students on a daily basis and they really know what it’s going to take to get us on the right path,” Murphy said.

The school board did decide to allow elementary-aged students with targeted needs to return to in-person learning starting October 19. But Murphy says he just didn’t think board members were presented with enough information. Making him weary to vote to bring all students back.

“We know that this pandemic is going to be with us for a while, so we need to look at all of our options. We can’t be stuck in an all virtual or all in-person mindset,” Murphy said.

The original plan was to create a hybrid schedule for students' return. Students would switch between in-person and virtual learning. Superintendent Manny Caulk said Monday, since the county was a “red” level on Thursday of last week, he recommended the board wait to implement the hybrid model until after fall break at least.

The board is supposed to release a more finalized plan for how students with targeted needs will start to go back to in-person learning by October 12.

Murphy says the board also expects a plan for the hybrid model by the end of October.

Copyright 2020 WKYT. All rights reserved.

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Ethane cracker plant in Beaver County about 70% complete, Shell executive says - TribLIVE

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About an hour ago

Construction of a multibillion-dollar ethane cracker plant in Beaver County is about 70% complete, a Shell Global executive said Tuesday during the Shale Insight conference.

Hilary Mercer, Shell Global’s vice president of Pennsylvania Chemicals, spent about a half-hour during the virtual conference describing the development of the facility, work on which had paused because of the covid-19 pandemic.

“Everything was going really well. We’d come through the winter, we were into March, the weather was getting better and we had our maximum workforce (of more than 8,000 people) on site,” Mercer said. “And then covid hit.”

Construction had paused in late March to allow for a deep cleaning of the facility.

Development is back up and running now with just fewer than 6,000 employees, Mercer said.

“We intend to be here for many, many, many years to come,” Mercer said. “Therefore, we’re part of that community, and we were starting to hear concerns from local officials about the size of our workforce and the impact that would have on local health providers if we had a major outbreak at the site.”

Leaders at the facility came up with a plan to implement covid-19 mitigation measures and slowly bring back workers. With extensive testing protocols, social distancing measures and other requirements, Mercer said there has so far been no evidence of covid-19 transmission on the premises.

Mercer also provided an overview of how the site has changed since 2014, when work first began. Showing aerial photographs, she pointed to areas where the landscape was altered and where facilities have been built. Among some of the changes were rerouting a highway and removing part of a hill to create more room for the facility. Soil was moved to remedy and contain contamination from past manufacturing at the site, Mercer said.

“We took this existing site … and actually repurposed it,” she said. “And that was a significant environmental action.”

Mercer said all of the major equipment and modules developed across the United States and around the world are now at the site. All that remains, she said, is to put it all together. Most substations are live and equipment is being moved from construction to “pre-commissioning.” The vast majority of plastics to be produced at the plant are intended for use within the United States, Mercer said.

When the plant begins operating, it will process ethane from the Marcellus and Utica shale reservoirs into ethylene and polyethylene, the building blocks of plastic. Officials have said it will employ about 600 full-time workers, and hundreds of other jobs could be created by spinoff companies related to the plastics industry.

Mercer also said during the conference that the Falcon Pipeline project is 95% percent complete. The project includes installing a pipeline nearly 100 miles long across the region to transport ethane, a natural gas, to the plant. She said 98% of the pipeline is installed on private land, and no part of its construction required the use of eminent domain.

The Shale Insight conference began Tuesday morning and will run until Thursday. Tuesday’s sessions focused heavily on how fossil fuel extraction has intersects with the economy, technology development and the 2020 election.

Teghan Simonton is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Teghan at 724-226-4680, tsimonton@triblive.com or via Twitter .

Categories: Business | Local | Regional | Top Stories

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'Complete streets' plan for Hicksville is absent $22M in funding - Newsday

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It appears that you are trying to access our website from a location in the European Union, which enforces the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). Unfortunately, because of this regulation we cannot provide access at this time. We appreciate your understanding.

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UCM Digital Health Offers Complete COVID Screening Solution - PRNewswire

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TROY, N.Y., Sept. 29, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- UCM Digital Health, a provider of telehealth technology and services, announces a fully integrated, end-to-end, web and app-based solution designed to screen for symptoms of COVID-19, and provide access to a team of medical providers for follow-up care where further assessment, testing, diagnosis and treatment can take place.

The app is designed to track employee or student populations self-reporting negative COVID symptoms prior to reporting to work. This information helps companies ensure the health and safety of its employees or students and reduce the risk of community spread.

"Our COVID offering is the only solution that combines a digital health experience with expert medical care," says Keith Algozzine, PA-C, chief executive officer and co-founder of UCM Digital Health. "We can take any population and effectively decipher who can simply be screened and who needs medical providers within minutes to help provide testing and or further medical care."

Due to the urgency for businesses to get back to work or school safely this fall, the COVID offering allows for a fast, seamless implementation. Using an easy-to-use automated questionnaire, and AI capabilities, the system provides instant feedback as to the employee's ability to report to work or need for a consult with the medical team. If the result indicates that the employee is cleared for work, nothing further is required.

Should the screening indicate the need for follow-up care and medical oversight, the app will connect the employee to the UCM medical team. The employer is able to track all results in real time through an automated reporting portal. This tool also works for a variety of organizations, including educational systems.

Employees who screen adversely are provided a consult with an emergency medicine trained provider to further evaluate their ability to report to work or school and receive further evaluation, testing, and or treatment as appropriate. In the case of an indication or potential exposure or community spread, the UCM Digital Health will direct the employee to follow protocols to mitigate further exposure and help guide the company through any additional and necessary healthcare-related steps.

About UCM Digital Health
UCM Digital Health offers a telehealth service coupled with a digital first platform so that consumers have access to the right information and the right care at the right time. UCM Digital Health accepts all patients, regardless of their condition, since UCM deploys an emergency medicine team of providers. UCM then triages, treats and navigates patients, including follow up for scheduling referrals, imaging and prescribing lab work, when appropriate. The UCM Digital Health platform enables a "Digital Front Door" consumers can access as their first step and facilitates the seamless exchange of healthcare information through the care process. This complete end to end approach results in the ability to divert up to 90% + of the visits away from an emergency room, urgent care or doctors' office and produces predictably convenient and personal care along with savings for employers, health plans and patients. To learn more about UCM, visit www.ucmdigitalhealth.com.

SOURCE UCM Digital Health

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Kent Police officer 'slapped colleague's bottom' over tea round - BBC News

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Kent Police headquarters in Maidstone
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A police officer slapped a female colleague on the bottom while calling her a "naughty girl" for making her own tea, a misconduct hearing has heard.

Det Insp Matt Banks is accused of hitting the detective constable at work in January this year.

Mr Banks denies gross misconduct but has accepted his actions amounted to misconduct.

The Kent Police officers were "long-time colleagues on friendly terms", the hearing's panel was told.

Aaron Rathmell, representing Kent Police, said Det Insp Banks was making a round of tea and the woman - known in the hearing as 'DC' - was "inadvertently left out".

"There was banter between them as he did so," Mr Rathmell said.

"The atmosphere, the context of the exchange was good-humoured at that point."

'Hard slap'

The panel was told Det Insp Banks then walked over and slapped his colleague on the bottom, telling her words to the effect of "just leave it, you naughty girl. I'll do it".

The female officer told the hearing she "froze in place".

She said: "It was a hard slap. It was a slap on the bottom which was of force, loud enough to hear it, to feel it. It hurt and made me jump."

Nick Yeo, representing Mr Banks, suggested he had described DC as a "cheeky girl", rather than naughty, but this was not accepted by her.

DC said the incident had impacted her trust and feeling of security at work.

She said: "This is 2020. This isn't the 1970s. I never would have expected that to happen to myself or anyone else."

'Mortified, embarrassed, disappointed'

Mr Banks is accused of gross misconduct by breaching the standards of professional behaviour of authority, respect and courtesy, equality and diversity, and discreditable conduct.

After DC had finished her evidence, Mr Yeo said on behalf of Mr Banks: "He wishes to apologise to you.

"He describes himself as being mortified, embarrassed and disappointed and he accepts that he has let you, himself, his family and Kent Police down."

The hearing at Kent Police Headquarters in Maidstone continues.

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Legislator wants colleague Rep. Terry O'Donnell investigated - Oklahoman.com

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Her mother, Georgia McAfee, had been in charge of the Catoosa Tag Agency for more than 40 years. Teresa O'Donnell had worked there for more than four years before her appointment.

The 21st Century Motor Tag Agent Act removed a long-standing ban on close relatives of legislators serving as tag agents. In its place was put a prohibition against the close relatives of the state's tax commissioners serving as tag agents.

In presenting the bill last year, O'Donnell said it would allow tag agents to charge more in fees.

"They haven't been modified in about 30 years. And we felt like they needed to be modified because they're bearing a lot more expense from the Tax Commission than they once wore," he said.

Questioned about the prohibition change, O'Donnell said, "Several years ago, the Senate used to make those appointments. And now ... those appointments are made by the Tax Commission. And so we've got a real conflict with the Tax Commission. And this language simply doesn't apply any more."

O'Donnell helped his wife apply to the Tax Commission, records show. He sent the $100 application fee to Tony Mastin, then the executive director of the Tax Commission.

Asked Friday about his memory of the application, Mastin said, "I am sure that I did not talk to him and I do not recall him calling our offices."

O'Donnell first won election in 2012 and is running again this year. His opponent is Susan Carle Young, D-Claremore.

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CNBC's Shepard Smith lauds former colleague Chris Wallace: 'Not a partisan guy' | TheHill - The Hill

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CNBC's Shepard Smith complimented his former Fox News colleague Chris WallaceChristopher (Chris) WallaceCompromise, yes — but how? A pre-debate suggestion Trump tax reveal roils presidential race Voters split on whether Trump, Biden will win first debate: poll MORE in an interview with "Tonight Show" host Jimmy Fallon on Monday night, saying Wallace is "not a partisan guy" and will hold both President TrumpDonald John TrumpCensus Bureau intends to wrap up count on Oct. 5 despite judge's order Top House Republican calls for probe of source of NYT Trump tax documents New Yorkers report receiving ballots with wrong name, voter addresses MORE and Democratic presidential nominee Joe BidenJoe BidenTop House Republican calls for probe of source of NYT Trump tax documents Judge's ruling creates fresh hurdle for Trump's TikTok ban Harris says she hasn't 'made a plan one way or another' on meeting Supreme Court nominee MORE accountable during their first debate on Tuesday night.

“I expect Chris Wallace to be prepared,” Smith said. “Nobody who has watched Chris Wallace thinks anything other than that he is a very tough, very thoroughly prepared journalist. And he has said repeatedly over the years, to me and publicly, ‘My job is to stay out of the way and be unnoticed as much as possible.’”

Smith, who left Fox News in October last year after 23 years at the network, said Wallace will not "let a falsehood or a misrepresentation or a ‘look over here’ kind of shiny object thing just slide.”

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“He will hold them [accountable]. Both of them. He’s not a partisan guy. He’s searching for truth. He’s trying to speak truth to power and trying to get information to the public. That’s what all journalists want to do,” Smith said.

Wallace has said he wants to stay as "invisible as possible" to avoid becoming the story going into the debate that is expected to be watched by 80 million people.

"I’m trying to get them to engage ... to focus on the key issues ... to give people at home a sense of why they want to vote for one versus the other,” Wallace has said. “If I’ve done my job right, at the end of the night, people will say, ‘That was a great debate, who was the moderator?’”

Smith, 56, begins his new nightly newscast with CNBC on Wednesday evening at 7 p.m.

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The FAFSA opens October 1—and it's more important than ever to complete it ASAP - CNBC

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Starting October 1, current and prospective college students and their families can complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, otherwise known as the FAFSA, for their share of $150 billion in federal student aid (including grants, loans and work-study) for the 2021-2022 school year. 

Schools often distribute student aid funds on a first-come, first-serve basis in order of when students complete the financial aid applications, and this year it will be more important than ever that students complete the FAFSA as soon as possible. 

Because while the share of families filing the FAFSA has been decreasing in recent years, the economic fallout of the coronavirus pandemic is expected to lead to an increased need for financial support. 

Discover Student Loans polled 1,500 parents with college-bound teens in early March and again in May. They found that 48% of parents lost income as a result of the pandemic, and 44% said they can not afford to pay for as much of their child's education as they had originally planned. 

As a result, 39% of those who did not plan to apply for federal aid in March, by May said they will. This increased need — and increased competition — means that applying early will be especially important. 

"Filling out the FAFSA is a critical step in the college financing process since schools use it to determine eligibility for federal, state and institutional aid, including grants and scholarships," explains Kate Manfred, Discover's senior vice president of student loans. "The FAFSA becomes available on October 1, and some schools award financial aid on a first-come, first-served basis. That's why it's so important for families to fill out the FAFSA as soon as it becomes available — because it increases the likelihood a family will receive an aid amount they are comfortable with. There's really no downside in applying early, but there is a potential downside of waiting and missing out on aid."

And while many families' financial circumstances may likely change over the next several months because of the pandemic, Manfred says it is best to apply first and make adjustments later, as needed. 

"Unfortunately, due to the nature of the ongoing pandemic, the timing at which Covid-19 impacts families may be unique, and things may change after families fill out their FAFSA," she says. "If that's the case, there is an appeals process families can take advantage of to update their financial aid decision."

"The number of families filing the FAFSA has been headed in the wrong direction for the past couple of years: 71% of families reported filing last year, down from 77% in 2018-19, and 83% in 2017-18," says Sallie Mae spokesperson, Ashley Boucher, citing her organization's annual 'How America Pays for College' report and implying that more families should apply. "Naturally, in light of Covid-19 and economic uncertainty, we may find more families looking for ways to keep those dollars in their wallets or bank accounts this year. That's why the FAFSA becomes more important than ever. Students and families need to file in order to be eligible for this aid."

She continues, "Families might be tempted to wait to file. In reality, though, it's important to file on or close to October 1, regardless of whether your income has changed. File now, and then request a special circumstances form from your college's financial aid office. This will kickstart a conversation where you can explain your situation, and appeal for more aid."

Boucher stresses that all families with college students should complete the FAFSA, even if they think they earn too much to qualify, explaining that in 2019, some 43% of families reported not completing the FAFSA because they believed they wouldn't qualify for any aid.

But, there is no official income cut-off to apply for federal student aid.

"The reality is, nearly all who apply will qualify for some," says Boucher.

"We've seen around 85% of students receive some form of financial aid," says Manfred. "And especially in these unprecedented times, we encourage families to fill out the form every year even if they don't think they'll quality or need the aid."

Charlie Javice, founder and CEO of Frank, an online FAFSA platform, tells CNBC Make It that families who make more than $250,000 do not typically qualify for grants or subsidized loans but points out that a vast majority of Americans make less than $250,000. Being too rich "only applies to less than 5% of the U.S. population. Everyone should be doing it."

And if you need some assistance, don't worry. The application can be completed in as little as four minutes and CNBC Make It's step-by-step guide for completing the FAFSA can help walk you through the process. 

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Quest complete: Tampa Bay Lightning blank Dallas Stars to capture elusive Stanley Cup - ESPN

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EDMONTON, Alberta -- The Tampa Bay Lightning are the champions of bubble hockey.

Brayden Point scored his playoff-best 14th goal, and the Lightning beat the Dallas Stars 2-0 on Monday to win the Stanley Cup and finish the most unusual NHL postseason in history, staged nearly entirely in quarantine because of the coronavirus pandemic. Nonetheless, the clock's hitting zeros in an empty arena set off a joyful celebration for a team that endured years of playoff heartbreak and two months in isolation.

"It takes a lot to be in a bubble for 80 days or whatever long it was," said defenseman Victor Hedman, who won the Conn Smythe Trophy as playoff MVP. "But it's all worth it now. We're coming home with the Cup."

The ultra-talented Lightning, one of the league's top teams not to win the title the past five years, finally completed the complicated puzzle that is the Stanley Cup playoffs, securing their first championship since 2004. They defeated the Columbus Blue Jackets; the Boston Bruins, the league's No. 1 team in the regular season; and the New York Islanders before eliminating the Stars in a marathon through two Canadian bubble sites that featured multiple overtimes and plenty of drama.

Goals from Point and Blake Coleman and a 22-save shutout by Andrei Vasilevskiy in Game 6 were enough to power the Lightning past a pesky Stars team that stayed alive with a double-overtime victory on Saturday in Game 5.

"That last period was probably the longest period of my life," Hedman said just before winning the MVP award. "There's so many emotions at the same time."

In 2004, the Lightning won the title with the league on the verge of a labor stoppage, a lockout that wiped out an entire season. The franchise is used to winning with uncertainty hovering around the league.

Questions about next season, though, were put off for a celebration by the Lightning and the NHL. Getting this done was a triumph of sorts, financial woes notwithstanding. The NHL is the first of the four major North American professional sports leagues to crown a champion since the start of the pandemic.

Tampa Bay's core group closed out the Final with an almost poetic display of what got the Lightning to this point the past several years and months. Their new star in Point scored a power-play goal in the first period with assists from longtime standouts Nikita Kucherov and Hedman, key addition Coleman killed a penalty and scored on an odd-man rush in the second, and Vasilevskiy did his job on a relatively slow night in net.

It was more of a coronation than a challenge, as the dominant Lightning outshot the Stars 29-22 and looked like the powerhouse they've been for much of the past decade.

"The beauty of our team is everyone was chipping in," Point said. "We got tremendous depth. We got contributions from anyone and everyone at different times, and that's what makes this win so special."

In the Final, Tampa Bay's power play was clicking and turned the series around. Point's goal made it 7-for-16 the past five games to decimate the Stars, who were undone by their lack of discipline and couldn't get enough "Dobby" magic from goaltender Anton Khudobin.

The Stars ran out of gas after injuries piled up. Rick Bowness, an assistant for Tampa Bay for five years who was part of the team's 2015 run that fell short in the Final, faces an uncertain future as interim coach.

"I couldn't ask more from our players,'' Bowness said. "So it wasn't enough to beat that team, so it wasn't enough. But it's better than sitting here saying how we could have done this or could have done [that]. We don't second-guess anything we've done."

The Lightning did to the Stars what Chicago did to them in the 2015 Final, when injuries built up. Tampa Bay had Point and No. 2 center Anthony Cirelli playing hurt this time, didn't have injured captain Steven Stamkos for almost all of the playoffs -- and still survived.

"These last six weeks have been really emotional for my family and I, not only on the ice but off the ice," said Stamkos, who played just 2 minutes, 37 seconds in the playoffs but scored a goal in Game 3. "I just want to say to my family: I love you guys so much. To all the friends and everyone who supported us along the way: We love you. We can't wait to celebrate with you."

The painful playoff losses look like mile markers now -- losing three consecutive games to Chicago after going up 2-1, blowing 3-2 series leads in the Eastern Conference finals in 2016 and 2018 and last season's jaw-dropping, first-round sweep by Columbus after the Lightning tied the NHL single-season wins record and won the Presidents' Trophy.

Coach Jon Cooper thought the attitude needed to change from wanting to beat every opponent 9-0 because that's not realistic in playoff hockey. His team went 12-3 in one-goal games this postseason, and he said the Lightning won because they were strengthened by years of "heartbreak.''

"To come back year after year and take our swings and take our licks and be talked about here as the kids who are going to be here every year -- and now we're talked about as the team who can't get it done -- and you know what? We got it done," Cooper said. "And it wasn't without failures along the way."

Commissioner Gary Bettman was on hand to present the Lightning with the Stanley Cup exactly 200 days after his dismal if hopeful announcement that the season would be put on pause with 189 games left.

The league and the players' union worked for nearly four months to iron out where, how and when to play so that 2020 wouldn't join 1919 and 2004 as a year when the Cup wasn't awarded. The plan they came up with was unusual. Like the NBA's, it called for walling off teams from the public for months on end. Unlike the NBA's plan, it called for doing so in two spots, Toronto and Edmonton, while the U.S. grappled with spiking coronavirus cases in too many places for NHL leadership to feel comfortable.

It worked. After more than 31,000 tests, there were zero positive coronavirus cases reported among players, coaches and staff inside the bubbles and just a handful among hotel, arena or restaurant employees. There was nothing close to an outbreak.

Bizarre as it was with no fans and manufactured crowd noise and light shows, the hockey was often top-notch. The expanded, 24-team postseason meant there was hockey nearly every day, sometimes from midday until past midnight, including a five-overtime marathon that was the second-longest game in modern hockey history. In this unprecedented postseason, there were two elimination games on the same day in the same arena.

By the conference finals, Rogers Place, a nearby JW Marriott and the rest of a heavily fenced bubble in downtown Edmonton had become the center of hockey for fans thousands of miles away, with Dallas and Tampa Bay, two of the southernmost teams in the league, settling the Cup in the NHL's northernmost arena.

In all, the NHL played 130 games in a bubble, 25 of them into overtime, before the final horn set off a celebration by Tampa Bay that had to suffice with no fans in the stands and few loved ones on the ice to share the moment. Players embraced one another and took out their phones to call and video chat with those who couldn't be there.

"We were in the bubble for this many days away from our friends and family, our support systems,'' Stamkos said. "We love each and every person that has helped us and allowed us to come here and accomplish our dream.''

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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