Rechercher dans ce blog

Sunday, March 31, 2024

What's open and closed for Easter? See which stores and restaurants are operating today. - CBS News

Where do Easter traditions come from? Good Question.

Where do Easter traditions come from? Good Question. 03:06

Millions of Americans celebrate Easter with family and friends this Sunday, which could require a last-minute run for treats before the egg hunt begins. Luckily, many retailers and restaurants will be open on March 31.

Here's a list of what is and isn't open on Easter

What places are open on Easter Sunday 2024?

  • Albertson
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Bass Pro Shops
  • Bath & Body Works
  • Big Lots
  • Capital Grille
  • Cabela's
  • CVS
  • Dollar General
  • Dollar Tree
  • DSW
  • Family Dollar
  • Half Price Books
  • Home Depot
  • Ikea
  • Kirkland's Home
  • Kroger
  • Marshall Grain
  • Old Navy
  • Petco
  • Rally House
  • Ross
  • Sephora
  • Sprouts
  • Staples
  • Tractor Supply Company
  • Trader Joe's
  • Ulta
  • Walgreens
  • Walmart
  • Wegmans
  • Whole Foods

Restaurants and fast-food chains open on Easter

  • Applebee's
  • Benihana
  • Bob Evans
  • Bojangles
  • Boston Market
  • Buffalo Wild Wings
  • Capital Grille
  • Carrabba's
  • Chili's
  • Cheesecake Factory
  • Cracker Barrel
  • Denny's
  • Dunkin'
  • Golden Corral
  • IHOP
  • KFC
  • Longhorn Steakhouse
  • McDonald's 
  • Olive Garden
  • Outback Steakhouse
  • PF Chang's
  • Red Lobster
  • Ruth's Chris
  • Seasons 52
  • Sonic
  • Starbucks
  • Texas Roadhouse
  • Waffle House
  • Wendy's
  • Whataburger
  • White Castle

Places with special hours of operation on Easter Sunday 2024

Some stores or restaurants may special hours of operation, depending on their location — including Burger King, Domino's, Firehouse Subs, Jersey Mike's, Jack in the Box, Panda Express, Panera, Popeyes, Shake Shack and Subway. 

  • Stop & Shop's grocery section will be open but the pharmacy will be closed.
  • Staples will be open from noon to 5 p.m., local time.

What places are closed on Easter Sunday 2024?

  • Aldi
  • Apple
  • Belk
  • Best Buy
  • Big Y
  • Bloomingdale's
  • Brookshires
  • Burlington
  • Calloway's Nursery
  • Costco
  • Container Store
  • Dick's Sporting Goods
  • Five Below
  • Goodwill
  • H&M
  • H-E-B Grocery
  • Hobby Lobby
  • Hollywood Feed
  • HomeGoods
  • Homesense
  • Honey Baked Ham Company
  • JCPenney
  • Kohl's
  •  Macy's
  • Market Basket
  • Marshalls
  • Michaels
  • Nordstrom & Nordstrom Rack
  • Office Depot
  • Publix
  • Sam's Club
  • Sierra
  • Target
  • TJ Maxx

Restaurants and fast-food chains closed on Easter

  • Chik-fil-A
  • Chipotle
  • In-N-Out
  • Raising Cane's

Correction: This story has been updated to note that Chik-fil-A is closed on Easter.

Adblock test (Why?)


What's open and closed for Easter? See which stores and restaurants are operating today. - CBS News
Read More

STREAKING SENATORS: Fast starts a key as Ottawa getting contributions throughout lineup - Ottawa Sun

Article content

The past eight days, a terrific five-game stretch for the Ottawa Senators, could have been the turning point in a drive toward the playoffs.

Advertisement 2

Article content

The emphasis is on “could have been.”

Article content

But Senators fans know all too well that’s not going to happen.

With five straight wins – 5-2 over New Jersey, 5-3 over Edmonton, 6-2 over Buffalo, 2-0 over Chicago and the latest, 3-2 in Winnipeg Saturday – the Senators avoided doing many of the things that have made them mediocre much of this season.

There was good rebound control, their goalies played extremely well, defencemen stayed between the opposing player and the Ottawa net, the forwards backchecked. And, more.

You wonder, where has this been all season?

“Our start to the game,” Senators coach Jacques Martin explained to TSN 1200’s Gord Wilson Saturday. “When I look at those five games, we’ve had some good starts. Another component, our defensive play has been better. It’s tougher to get into our zone. Our defence has stood up more, there are better gaps. There’s help from the forwards coming back to help.

Advertisement 3

Article content

“Also, we’re getting contributions from different people. (Saturday), we got a goal from (Ridly) Greig, we got a goal from (Boris) Katchouk. You’re getting production from your bottom six forwards; that’s really important.”

“Goaltending, defence, forwards, power play, penalty kill, everything’s really coming together,” said Greig. “It’s fun to play like that.”

“It’s the little things everybody’s been doing the past few games; you see the results we’ve had,” said Brady Tkachuk, who scored the game-winner against the Jets.

If you’re looking for a good reason why the Senators will be on the outside looking in come playoff time, how about this? Going into Saturday’s game in Winnipeg, they were 0-13-1 on the road against the Western Conference this season. Zero wins. That’s tough to bounce back from in the standings. 

Advertisement 4

Article content

“I’ve seen the numbers of us (playing teams in) the Western Conference on the road this year, so (it was) nice to get the win (Saturday),” said Tkachuk.

The goaltending (Joonas Korpisalo and Anton Forsberg) has really stepped it up. Keeping the puck out of their own net has often dogged the Senators this season.

“We have full belief and trust in Korpy and Forsy; it’s nice to see them get rewarded,” said Tkachuk.

As the Senators play out the rest of their regular season – they’ve got nine games remaining – it’s already with an eye toward next year.

“(We’re looking) to keep the same kind of intensity and emotion,” said Martin. “There’s (been) a better commitment away from the puck, that’s been a big help. Our forwards are getting back quicker to help our D versus maybe hoping to get the puck back. They’re playing more of a 200-foot game. That’s been helpful.”

Advertisement 5

Article content

There will be changes in Ottawa – it’d be a mistake to go status-quo – ahead of next season.

But, it’s good to talk about positives, something  we we haven’t been given much of a chance to do by the Senators, who, with a 33-36-4 record, are nearing the .500 mark.

Full credit to the effort the team has been showing.

“It’s been fun,” said Tkachuk, the team’s captain. “We want to keep building, keep working. Hopefully (Saturday’s victory) is one (win) of many down the stretch and into the future.”

On the other end of it Saturday, the Jets lost their sixth straight. They’re heading for the playoffs, but they’re also tumbling in the wrong direction. The home-town fans booed them off the ice after they were dispatched by the Senators.

After an off-day Sunday, the Senators practise Monday in preparation for a game in Minnesota Tuesday. The Florida Panthers are in Ottawa for a Thursday game. Ottawa is home to New Jersey Saturday, then hits the road for a Sunday game in Washington.

Recommended from Editorial

  1. Winnipeg's Josh Morrissey and Ottawa's Parker Kelly collide during the first period of Saturday's game.

    THE BREAKDOWN: Ottawa Senators keep streak alive with win over Winnipeg Jets

  2. Maple Leafs centre Auston Matthews (34) celebrates his 60th goal of the season during the third period against the Sabres in Buffalo, Saturday, March 30, 2024.

    Matthews scores his 60th as Maple Leafs shut out Sabres in Buffalo

Article content

Comments

Join the Conversation

This Week in Flyers

Adblock test (Why?)


STREAKING SENATORS: Fast starts a key as Ottawa getting contributions throughout lineup - Ottawa Sun
Read More

What's open and closed for Easter? See which stores and restaurants are operating today. - CBS News

Where do Easter traditions come from? Good Question.

Where do Easter traditions come from? Good Question. 03:06

Millions of Americans will celebrate Easter with family and friends this Sunday, which could require a last-minute run for treats before the egg hunt begins. Luckily, many retailers and restaurants will be open on March 31. 

Here's a list of what is and isn't open on Easter. 

What places are open on Easter Sunday 2024?

  • Albertson
  • Barnes & Noble
  • Bass Pro Shops
  • Bath & Body Works
  • Big Lots
  • Capital Grille
  • Cabela's
  • CVS
  • Dollar General
  • Dollar Tree
  • DSW
  • Family Dollar
  • Half Price Books
  • Home Depot
  • Ikea
  • Kirkland's Home
  • Kroger
  • Marshall Grain
  • Old Navy
  • Petco
  • Rally House
  • Ross
  • Sephora
  • Sprouts
  • Staples
  • Tractor Supply Company
  • Trader Joe's
  • Ulta
  • Walgreens
  • Walmart
  • Wegmans
  • Whole Foods

Restaurants and fast-food chains open on Easter

  • Applebee's
  • Benihana
  • Bob Evans
  • Bojangles
  • Boston Market
  • Buffalo Wild Wings
  • Capital Grille
  • Carrabba's
  • Chili's
  • Cheesecake Factory
  • Cracker Barrel
  • Denny's
  • Dunkin'
  • Golden Corral
  • IHOP
  • KFC
  • Longhorn Steakhouse
  • McDonald's 
  • Olive Garden
  • Outback Steakhouse
  • PF Chang's
  • Red Lobster
  • Ruth's Chris
  • Seasons 52
  • Sonic
  • Starbucks
  • Texas Roadhouse
  • Waffle House
  • Wendy's
  • Whataburger
  • White Castle

Places with special hours of operation on Easter Sunday 2024

Some stores or restaurants may special hours of operation, depending on their location — including Burger King, Domino's, Firehouse Subs, Jersey Mike's, Jack in the Box, Panda Express, Panera, Popeyes, Shake Shack and Subway. 

  • Stop & Shop's grocery section will be open but the pharmacy will be closed.
  • Staples will be open from noon to 5 p.m., local time.

What places are closed on Easter Sunday 2024?

  • Aldi
  • Apple
  • Belk
  • Best Buy
  • Big Y
  • Bloomingdale's
  • Brookshires
  • Burlington
  • Calloway's Nursery
  • Costco
  • Container Store
  • Dick's Sporting Goods
  • Five Below
  • Goodwill
  • H&M
  • H-E-B Grocery
  • Hobby Lobby
  • Hollywood Feed
  • HomeGoods
  • Homesense
  • Honey Baked Ham Company
  • JCPenney
  • Kohl's
  •  Macy's
  • Market Basket
  • Marshalls
  • Michaels
  • Nordstrom & Nordstrom Rack
  • Office Depot
  • Publix
  • Sam's Club
  • Sierra
  • Target
  • TJ Maxx

Restaurants and fast-food chains closed on Easter

  • Chik-fil-A
  • Chipotle
  • In-N-Out
  • Raising Cane's

Adblock test (Why?)


What's open and closed for Easter? See which stores and restaurants are operating today. - CBS News
Read More

Saturday, March 30, 2024

Real Fast: Friday's best in 60 seconds | 03/30/2024 - MLB.com

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Real Fast: Friday's best in 60 seconds | 03/30/2024  MLB.com
Real Fast: Friday's best in 60 seconds | 03/30/2024 - MLB.com
Read More

Why the Wall Street Journal left a blank article on its front page today - Fast Company

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Why the Wall Street Journal left a blank article on its front page today  Fast Company
Why the Wall Street Journal left a blank article on its front page today - Fast Company
Read More

Video: Remy Metailler Hits Mount Prevost's Steep & Fast Tracks - Pinkbike.com


If you follow downhill racing or just mountain biking in general you will be familiar with the names Finn Iles, Mark Wallace, Jackson Goldstone, Kirk McDowall, Gracey Hermstreet, Magnus Manson etc, and you would have heard about a place called Prevost.

That's because Prevost is the training ground of many of these Canadian racers, and was where Stevie Smith trained for years. Located on Vancouver Island just south of Nanaimo, Mt Prevost has become a hub for downhill mountain biking. Easy to shuttle with fast, steep and gnarly tracks, it's got everything to produce some fun, but also get riders to become faster and faster and ready to go racing World Cups.

Jump on board on a day of riding with local legend Dean Tennant as I try to learn the trails.

Big shout out to www.cowichantrails.ca for the maintenance and work on this mountain.

Follow @remymetailler and @deantennantmtb for more.


Adblock test (Why?)


Video: Remy Metailler Hits Mount Prevost's Steep & Fast Tracks - Pinkbike.com
Read More

Breakingviews - Shein's fast fashion comes with fast-finance risks - Reuters

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Breakingviews - Shein's fast fashion comes with fast-finance risks  Reuters
Breakingviews - Shein's fast fashion comes with fast-finance risks - Reuters
Read More

‘If you’re coming up second best’: Lee Trevino has fast solutions to 2 trouble shots - Golf.com

Lee Trevino

Lee Trevino at the 2022 PNC Championship.

Getty Images

Lee Trevino stands with his golf ball below him. Later, it’s above him. 

But neither trouble shot matters to him. Not at all. 

“Doesn’t make any difference how these architects build these courses,” he said. 

“You can handle any of ’em.”

Trevino was speaking in a video recently posted on the Golf Teachers App Instagram page, and he was in his element. The one-of-a-kind talker was turning phrases. And the legendary ball striker and six-time major winner was teaching, and the lesson here involved shots where the ball is below your feet, and where the ball is above your feet.  

His solutions to both were fast. Here, you should watch the video, and it’s below. Below that are some notes. 

On shots where the ball is below your feet, Trevino said players often put too much weight forward, with their heels off the ground, and the swing will topple them over. For pure contact, he said this:

— “What you have to do is play the ball back in your stance.”

— “And sit down on it. Get down low. When you do that, all the weight gets on your heels. Keep that right foot down all the way through the shot.”

On shots where the ball is above your feet, Trevino advised this:

— “You want to put the ball back in the middle of your stance.”

— “Make sure that the weight doesn’t get back on your heels. Keep that weight up on your toes. As a matter of fact, keep that right heel up off the ground all the way through the shot. This will keep you up over the ball.”

From there, after his lesson, he offered his line on architects. 

Editor’s note: GOLF.com has shared numerous stories on Trevino, and you can find that collection here. One of the author’s favorites, should you be interested, can be found here, and it can also be found if you scroll below. 

***

What do you ask golf legend Lee Trevino, who doubles as potentially the best ball striker of all time, when the opportunity presents itself? With a seemingly infinite amount of golf wisdom at his disposal, I decided to keep it simple:

“What’s some advice for golfers who struggle to hit the ball solidly?”

lee trevino
Why your ball position is hurting your golf swing, according to Lee Trevino
By: Luke Kerr-Dineen

For a moment, I was worried the question was too broad, but the Merry Mex, speaking at the 2021 Berenberg Invitational, didn’t miss a beat.

“Your arms are only so long,” he says. “You have to understand that your arms are like the limbs attached to the trunk of a tree. My body is the trunk, and my arms are the limbs. They swing back and forth.”

The analogy is a useful one because it describes something lots of pros think about: The “radius” of their golf swing. Your arms are going to straighten as you swing, Trevino says, which means you need to monitor the literal space between yourself and the golf ball you’re trying to hit.

And in that regard, there’s nothing more important than your ball position.

Trevino says your ball position is (probably) too far forward 

Let’s go back to Lee’s tree limb analogy. Your arms — the limbs — swing back and forth around the trunk of the tree. As your arms do this, there’s a point where they begin moving up and around your body, away from the golf ball. This is why, Trevino says, a common mistake occurs when golfers play the ball too far forward in their stance: Their arms begin coming up, which brings the club with them, which results in thin shots, whiffs and other mis-hits.

“They’re coming up before they’re hitting the golf ball,” Trevino says. “The ball is going low, it’s going left, and you’re catching the ball thin.”

It’s why Trevino tells golfers to play the ball more back in their stance than they think. It’ll help them make a compressed strike on the golf ball and send the ball straighter.

You can watch Trevino in his own words below.

Latest In Instruction

Nick Piastowski

Nick Piastowski

Golf.com Editor

Nick Piastowski is a Senior Editor at Golf.com and Golf Magazine. In his role, he is responsible for editing, writing and developing stories across the golf space. And when he’s not writing about ways to hit the golf ball farther and straighter, the Milwaukee native is probably playing the game, hitting the ball left, right and short, and drinking a cold beer to wash away his score. You can reach out to him about any of these topics — his stories, his game or his beers — at nick.piastowski@golf.com.

Adblock test (Why?)


‘If you’re coming up second best’: Lee Trevino has fast solutions to 2 trouble shots - Golf.com
Read More

Friday, March 29, 2024

Thursday, March 28, 2024

California $20 Fast-Food Minimum Wage Is Coming April 1 - The New York Times

A decade ago, Jamie Bynum poured his life savings into a barbecue restaurant now tucked between a Thai eatery and a nutrition store in a Southern California strip mall.

As a franchise owner of a Dickey’s Barbecue Pit, Mr. Bynum is pridefully particular about the details of his establishment — the size of the hickory wood pile on display near the entrance, the positioning of paper towel rolls on each table, the careful calibration it takes to keep his restaurant staffed 10 hours a day with a small crew.

The staffing, he said, has become harder in recent years, as the state’s minimum wage has steadily increased since 2017, often rising by a dollar per year. Today, it’s $16 an hour.

But on Monday, it will jump to $20 an hour for most fast-food workers in California, propelling them to the top of what minimum-wage earners make anywhere in the country. (Only Tukwila, Wash., a small city outside Seattle, sets the bar higher, with a minimum wage of $20.29 for many employees.)

The ambitious law, which supporters hope to see replicated nationwide, has been characterized by opposing sides in stark terms. To backers, it is a step toward fair compensation for low-wage workers who faced significant risk during the pandemic. To opponents, it is a cataclysmic move that will raise food prices, lead to job losses and force some franchisees to consider closing.

“People don’t understand that when wages rise, so do the prices,” Mr. Bynum said.

Mr. Bynum has, in recent years, raised prices to try to maintain profit margins — and each time, he said, he has noticed a drop in customers. That, in turn, forced painful decisions about cutting staffing and trimming hours.

The new minimum wage will add $3,000 to $4,000 to his monthly expenses, he said, and while he hopes to keep all eight of his employees, he doesn’t know if he can make the numbers add up.

One employee, Josue Reyes, has worked at the restaurant on and off over the past decade.

He works the evening shift, often taking the bus and then riding his hybrid bike the rest of the way to the restaurant. Mr. Reyes, 35, said the consistent pay raises through the years — he now makes $16 an hour — had helped him significantly. He puts much of his paycheck toward assisting his mother pay the rent at their trailer park and tries to save where he can.

While another pay increase will help him, Mr. Reyes, who has worked in fast food for much of his life, said he feared that before long, jobs would become more competitive and harder to keep.

“There can be job losses because restaurants close,” he said on a recent weekday, dressed in jeans and a T-shirt for his shift. “No one wants that, but it seems very possible.”

The potential ripple effects of the law weighed by Mr. Bynum and Mr. Reyes at this fast-food restaurant in Lancaster, a high desert city at the northern edge of Los Angeles County, mirror conversations that will play out across the state as owners and employees — and eventually consumers — adjust to the new reality.

Championed by powerful labor organizations, including the Service Employees International Union, the law will lift pay for more than half a million California employees who work for fast-food chains with 60 or more locations nationwide. It also creates a council comprising, among others, workers, franchise owners and union representatives who will oversee future increases to the minimum wage and devise workplace standards.

In an interview, Mary Kay Henry, president of the S.E.I.U., said the law was long overdue. “We are talking about a billion-dollar industry that can and should afford this raise,” she said, noting that most workers are Black and Latino. “Raising pay improves employers’ ability to hire and retain workers.”

The potential beneficiaries include Anna Velazquez-Cruz, who has worked at a Papa Johns in the East Hollywood neighborhood of Los Angeles for a year.

Ms. Velazquez-Cruz, 19, lives with relatives in an apartment a short walk from the shop, where she makes around $18 an hour. “The internet bills, the rent, it gets higher,” she said on a recent evening.

But Matt Haller, president of the International Franchise Association, said he expected the new law to significantly harm many small businesses.

“Local restaurants will face hundreds of thousands of dollars in increased operating costs,” Mr. Haller said. “Customers will face higher food prices, and restaurant owners will have to cut costs to keep their doors open.”

Economists are divided over the merits and pitfalls.

Ismael Cid-Martinez, an economist at the Economic Policy Institute, a think tank partly funded by labor unions, said the law would help lift wages for workers in other low-paying industries in the state.

“These workers are also consumers,” he said. “Any increase in earnings for them means additional resources that they use to feed their families, bolster small businesses and strengthen their state economy.”

David Neumark, a professor of economics at the University of California, Irvine, said the impact would be more nuanced. “A higher minimum wage creates winners and losers,” he said.

The winners will be workers who keep their jobs and at most have a modest reduction in hours, he said, while the losers will be those whose hours are substantially cut or who lose their jobs — along with smaller franchise owners who were already struggling to make much of a profit.

“They make more than minimum-wage workers,” he said. “But lots of them are not high-income.”

That is the case for Mr. Bynum, whose path to franchise ownership started with a career change 10 years ago.

He and his wife, Liza, who both then worked in the information technology sector, noticed a dearth of barbecue restaurants near their home in Lancaster and used all of their $150,000 in savings to open a Dickey’s Barbecue Pit.

The chain, based in Dallas, operates more than 400 restaurants, and Mr. Bynum said he pays 9 percent in royalties to the headquarters. He has cut his staff by half over the past decade and trimmed hours. He has raised prices: A loaded baked potato cost $8 when he opened; now it’s almost $20.

That’s a significant increase for his customers in Lancaster, a city 70 miles north of downtown Los Angeles where about 15 percent of residents live at or below the poverty line — and where higher pay and higher costs will both be keenly felt.

Most days in recent years, Mr. Bynum and his wife have run the restaurant with help from their two adult children.

“What started as a dream has slowly faded,” Mr. Bynum said.

Joe Marques is another owner wondering how to navigate the months ahead.

He became the owner of a Wienerschnitzel restaurant in San Jose, Calif., in the early 1990s and now has two other locations in the area. He employs around 45 people at the three stores combined. As an owner, he said, he is surviving week to week and has little money for capital improvements, such as repaving parking lots and painting.

“There is a lot of perception that we are a big corporation simply because of the name,” he said. “In reality, I am essentially an independent small-business owner.”

At current staffing levels — 60 percent of his employees work full time, the others part time — it will cost him an additional $4,500 to $5,000 a month per store to remain open, he said. Mr. Marques, 64, had wanted to permanently hand his businesses over to his son. That hope, he said, seems more and more fleeting these days.

“It’s not like we are getting rich on this,” he said. “We are trying to make a living.”

For Mr. Reyes, the longtime Dickey’s employee, his job has given a sense of stability that he worries may soon shatter.

He likes that the job is close to home, Mr. Reyes said, so someone in his family can pick him up and he can avoid taking a late-night bus. While welcoming the higher pay that the law will mandate, he expressed sympathy about the financial strain on Mr. Bynum.

“There has been a type of companionship,” he said. “He’s given me consistent work.”

What Mr. Bynum sees on the horizon concerns him. For months, he and his wife have thought about what they might do next — perhaps, he said, go back to I.T. — but he fears his options would be limited. At 51, he’s not sure who would hire him. He worries, too, about what would happen to Mr. Reyes and his other employees.

“We’re all in this as a team,” he said. “I care about my people and have given people a lot of opportunities over the years.”

And singling out the fast-food industry for a higher minimum wage, Mr. Bynum said, “all just seems targeted and like an attack.”

“I am a small-business owner at the end of the day,” he added, “just scraping along.”

Adblock test (Why?)


California $20 Fast-Food Minimum Wage Is Coming April 1 - The New York Times
Read More

'Chilling': Caledon mayor fast-tracking housing development - Caledon Enterprise

Caledon’s mayor is using her Ontario-appointed “strong mayor” powers to speed up development for 35,000 homes in 12 developments across the community.

“Caledon is poised for transformation, and to ensure our competitiveness in the GTA, we must take bold steps to address the housing shortage,” said Mayor Annette Groves in a media release on March 27.

Town of Caledon map

Caledon Mayor Annette Groves used strong-mayor powers to fast-track 12 housing developments.

Caledon photo opp

Caledon Coun. Lynn Kiernan (left), Coun. Nick deBoer, Deputy Premier and Dufferin-Caledon MPP Sylvia Jones, Associate Housing Minister Rob Flack, Mayor Annette Groves, Coun. Dave Sheen, Coun. Christina Early, Coun. Doug Maskell and Coun. Mario Russo pose for a photo with a $2.8-million cheque from the provincial Building Faster Fund to the Town of Caledon.

Adblock test (Why?)


'Chilling': Caledon mayor fast-tracking housing development - Caledon Enterprise
Read More

NBC News Acted Fast to Land Ronna McDaniel. Her Tenure Lasted Just Days. - The Wall Street Journal

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

NBC News Acted Fast to Land Ronna McDaniel. Her Tenure Lasted Just Days.  The Wall Street Journal
NBC News Acted Fast to Land Ronna McDaniel. Her Tenure Lasted Just Days. - The Wall Street Journal
Read More

Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Fast-food companies seeing low-income diners pare orders - Reuters

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Fast-food companies seeing low-income diners pare orders  Reuters
Fast-food companies seeing low-income diners pare orders - Reuters
Read More

The Electric Circuit inaugurates its largest fast-charging point at La Porte de l'Érable rest area - Yahoo Canada Finance

SAINT-LOUIS-DE-BLANDFORD, QC, March 27, 2024 /CNW/ - The Electric Circuit, Québec's first public charging network for electric vehicles, is pleased to announce the commissioning of its largest fast-charging point at the La Porte de l'Érable rest area located at Exit 228 on Highway 20.

Circuit Électrique logo (CNW Group/Circuit électrique)
Circuit Électrique logo (CNW Group/Circuit électrique)

In addition to the four 50-kW fast-charge stations already at the site, the Electric Circuit is adding eight 180-kW power sharing charging stations and two ABB E-mobility 350-kW charging stations. With a total of 2,340 kilowatts of power offered, this Electric Circuit charging point is the largest of its kind in Québec and can charge 24 electric vehicles simultaneously. What's more, vehicles with a trailer and even heavy- and light-duty trucks will be able to easily connect to some of the new charging stations.

With a growing number of electric vehicles on our roads and given that Highway 20, which links the city of Québec and Montréal, is the busiest route in the province, adding this many fast-charge stations at that location was key to offering EV drivers even more charging options and reducing lineups.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Electric Circuit would like to thank Natural Resources Canada's Zero Emission Vehicle Infrastructure Program for the funding to install the new charging stations.

Quotations

"The Electric Circuit would like to highlight the support of the La Porte de l'Érable rest area for the space provided, allowing us to offer EV drivers this fast-charge superstation. With the help of our various partners, we will continue to develop our charging network throughout Québec and offer a reliable charging service to meet the needs of the growing number of electric vehicles expected in the coming years."

Renaud Cloutier, Manager – Business Development, the Electric Circuit at Hydro-Québec

"I would like to emphasize the continuity of our electrification vision for the La Porte de l'Érable rest area and our goal of offering an exemplary site to highway drivers—both today and in the future. Congratulations to the Electric Circuit team, who helped make planning, searching for solutions and carrying out the project an outstanding experience. Users of the La Porte de l'Érable rest area can now count on a total of 44 simultaneous charging sessions offered by the Electric Circuit and Tesla charging stations."

Samuel Baril – Owner of the rest area Sortie 228 – La Porte de L'Érable

"We are delighted to support Hydro-Québec in its objective of offering drivers more sustainable options throughout Québec—options that are quick and practical and that are available to everyone. This project is an example that highlights the importance of helping our customers and EV drivers reduce their GHG emissions."

Matthew Bartolone, Regional Vice President of ABB E-mobility for Québec

About the Electric Circuit

The Electric Circuit is the largest public charging network for electric vehicles in Québec. It consists of more than 5,200 public charging stations, including close to 950 fast-charge stations, in every region of the province. Electric Circuit users have access to a 24/7 telephone help line as well as a charging-station locator service. The Electric Circuit website and app for iOS and Android are updated as new stations are installed. Members can also use the Electric Circuit app to access the FLO network, the ChargePoint network, Shell Recharge, Hypercharge, SemaConnect and Swtch anywhere in North America as well as New Brunswick's eCharge network.

Information about fast-charge stations

Charging your EV at a 100-kW fast-charge station can add up to 400 km of range per charging hour, depending on weather conditions and the power of the vehicle's on-board charger. A vehicle's range is also affected by driving style as well as the use of heating or air conditioning.

The Electric Circuit's fast-charging superstation at Porte de L'Érable, exit 228 off Highway 20. (CNW Group/Circuit électrique)
The Electric Circuit's fast-charging superstation at Porte de L'Érable, exit 228 off Highway 20. (CNW Group/Circuit électrique)

SOURCE Circuit électrique

Cision
Cision

View original content to download multimedia: http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/March2024/27/c8713.html

Adblock test (Why?)


The Electric Circuit inaugurates its largest fast-charging point at La Porte de l'Érable rest area - Yahoo Canada Finance
Read More

Fast food workers are losing their jobs in California as new minimum wage law takes effect - USA TODAY

Fast food workers are losing their jobs in California as more restaurant chains prepare to meet a new $20 minimum wage set to go into effect next week.

Restaurants making cuts are mostly pizzerias, according to a report published by The Wall Street Journal. Multiple businesses have plans to axe hundreds of jobs, as well as cut back hours and freeze hiring, the report shows.

Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom signed the Fast Act back in September to require fast food chains with 60 or more locations nationwide to meet that wage increase after labor unions fought for it alongside the healthcare industry, which will also see a boost to earnings in June.

"This is a big deal," Newsom said alongside union members in September. "That's 80% of the workforce."

Layoffs began last year

Pizza Hut is laying off more than 1,000 delivery drivers in California, according to federal and state filings. Fast-food workers in the state are set to get a pay bump in April 2023 as the minimum wages rises from $16 to $20 an hour.

Pizza Hut announced cuts to more than 1,200 delivery jobs in December, previous reporting by USA TODAY shows. Some Pizza Hut franchises in California also filed notices with the state saying they were discontinuing their delivery services entirely, according to Fox Business.

"The franchisee is transferring their delivery services to third-party. While it is unfortunate, we look at this as a transfer of jobs," Pizza Hut told Fox. "As you know, many California restaurant operators are following the same approach due to rising operating costs."

Round Table Pizza will lay off around 1,280 delivery drivers this year in the Golden State, and Excalibur Pizza has plans to cut 73 driver jobs, as well as 21% of its workforce in April, a state filling obtained by The Wall Street Journal shows.

USA TODAY has reached out to all pizza chains for comment.

No exemptions, Newsom says

The legislation indicated that businesses that “feature ice cream, coffee, boba tea, pretzels, or donuts” could meet the definition of a “fast food restaurant covered by the law," according to The National Law Review's breakdown of the bill. The law could extend to similar businesses that provide things like sweets and drinks.

Greg Flynn, who has monopoly over Panera franchises in California, tried to get out of the state's new mandate earlier this year, according to Bloomberg, holding fast to a loophole that restaurants making in-house bread do not have to boost employee earnings.

Newsom's office called the claim "absurd," telling the Los Angeles Times that the restaurant chain would see no such exemption.

Chipotle's CFO told Yahoo Finance that the company will be forced to increase their prices to comply with the minimum wage increase. Starbucks told the outlet it is evaluating the impact of the Fast Act but did not comment on whether or not it would comply. It is unclear whether or not the franchise would be considered a "fast food restaurant" under the new legislation.

Starbucks has committed to at least a 3% increase to wages that went into effect ON Jan. 1, according to a statement put out by the company.

The coffee chain did recently close seven of its stores in the state of California, USA TODAY previously reported.

Adblock test (Why?)


Fast food workers are losing their jobs in California as new minimum wage law takes effect - USA TODAY
Read More

Tuesday, March 26, 2024

Chemistry Forms An Unbreakable Bond Between Fast and Larocque - The Hockey News

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

Chemistry Forms An Unbreakable Bond Between Fast and Larocque  The Hockey News
Chemistry Forms An Unbreakable Bond Between Fast and Larocque - The Hockey News
Read More

"Fight Will Go On": Sonam Wangchuk Ends 21-Day Fast Over Ladakh Demands - NDTV

'Fight Will Go On': Sonam Wangchuk Ends 21-Day Fast Over Ladakh Demands

Mr Wangchuk had started the fast on March 6.

Srinagar:

After surviving on salt and water for 21 days, noted climate activist and education reformer Sonam Wangchuk has ended his hunger strike to press for statehood for Ladakh and the protection of the fragile Himalayan ecology, but insisted that his fight will continue.

"I will continue to fight for constitutional safeguards for Ladakh and people's political rights," Mr Wangchuk said as he ended the hunger strike. Thousands gathered in various parts of the Union Territory as the fast ended, and women's groups have said they will now begin a hunger strike over the same demands. 

When he had begun his fast on March 6, the reformer - whose life had inspired the character of Phsukh Wangdu in the 2009 film '3 Idiots' - had said he would continue it for 21 days and that it could be "extendable till death". 

Earlier on Tuesday, Mr Wangchuk had urged the Union government to "show character" and meet the demands of the people of Ladakh. In a video posted on X, he had pointed to a frozen glass of water and said 350 people had joined him in the fast despite temperatures dropping to -10 degrees Celsius.

 "We are trying to remind and awaken the consciousness of our Prime Minister (Narendra) Modi and Home Minister Mr Amit Shah to safeguard the fragile ecosystem of the Himalayan mountains in Ladakh and the unique indigenous tribal cultures that thrive here," the activist said in the video. 

"We do not want to think of PM Modi and Amit Shah ji as just politicians, we would rather like to think of them as statesmen but, for that, they will have to show some character and farsightedness," he added.

Sixth Schedule

Ladakh, which consists of the Leh and Kargil districts, became a separate Union Territory after Article 370, which gave special status to Jammu and Kashmir, was abrogated on August 5, 2019. 

Massive protests and hunger strikes began taking place in the UT earlier this year after leaders of Buddhist-dominated Leh and Muslim-dominated Kargil joined hands under the banners of the Apex Body of Leh and the Kargil Democratic Alliance to demand statehood and the safeguarding of rights of its majority tribal population under the Sixth Schedule of the Constitution.

The Centre constituted a high-level committee to look into the demands but no breakthrough could be achieved after a series of meetings with representatives of the protesters. On March 4, leaders from the UT met Home Minister Amit Shah and said he had refused to accept the people's demands. Mr Wangchuk began his fast in Leh two days later.

Adblock test (Why?)


"Fight Will Go On": Sonam Wangchuk Ends 21-Day Fast Over Ladakh Demands - NDTV
Read More

Armed man threatens to kill fast food employees during robbery: police - CTV News Winnipeg

[unable to retrieve full-text content] Armed man threatens to kill fast food employees during robbery: police    CTV News Winnipeg Armed m...