from مغرس : أخبار المغرب على مدار الساعة http://ift.tt/2oBKcpC
source IFTTT
You know what they say about March rolling in like a lion.
A powerful nor'easter has its sights on the tri-state to close out the workweek, threatening to dump heavy rains across the region that could even cause flooding inland, according to Storm Team 4.
Damaging winds will also be a factor, and suburbs to the north and west of the city could see a messy mix of rain transition to snow as the storm system hovers over the region for a roughly 36-hour period.
Storm Team 4 says the weather system will develop over the southern U.S. over the next few days before heading to the tri-state area. While a few places well to the north and west of the city could encounter a few lighter could possibly encounter showers Wednesday night, most of the area will remain dry heading into Thursday, Storm Team 4 says. Thursday is expected to be mostly dry until late in the afternoon as showers move in and temps trend cooler.
Friday is expected to be the nastiest day, with Storm Team 4 predicting intense winds, showers and periods of heavy rain, along with that wintry mix mucking up spots to the north and west of the city.
At this point, Storm Team 4 says the main threats are coastal and inland flooding and wind gusts that could potentially take down tree limbs or power lines.
Rain showers or snowflakes could linger into the early part of Saturday, Storm Team 4 says, but the skies are expected to clear up by Sunday. Temps stay cooler, in the mid-40s, into the early part of next week.
A Westport, Connecticut high school was dismissed early out of "an abundance of caution" after a student had thoughts to execute a mass shooting, police said during a press conference on Tuesday.
Staples High School was dismissed at 1:15 p.m. after students and staff were asked to shelter in place. Afterschool activities were also canceled.
Police said they received a call from Staples High School officials at 9 a.m. on Tuesday saying a student was overheard making threats that he was going to shoot a teacher.
When police arrived to the school, the teen was being interviewed by administrators. The school officials told police that the student expressed that he had "thoughts" of executing a mass shooting at Staples High School, according to Westport police.
Investigators are looking into whether those thoughts manifested into an actual plan, NBC Connecticut reports. Detectives found firearms at the student's home -- they belong to the student's father and were reportedly locked in a safe, but investigators could not confirm if all firearms were accounted for, police said.
Officers from Connecticut State Police, Norwalk and Fairfield were sent to Westport police with the early dismissal. Officers were placed at all Westport schools out of precaution until dismissal.
The student is in custody and is being evaluated a medical facility. The investigation is ongoing.
In a letter to parents later in the night, Staples President said class would proceed as scheduled on Wednesday and that the school would be providing additional resources and support for students.
He added that he also got text messages from his son who was worried about him during a press conference about the situation.
"The phone was burning a hole in my pocket thinking about what he must be feeling in that moment, so I finally decided to be rude and just text him that everyone was fine, and that I would call soon," D'Amico said. "It made me think about how so many of you as parents must have felt, but also about how our first responders, district and school administrators, teachers, secretaries, paraprofessionals, custodians, cafeteria staff, and local government leaders put everything aside in that moment to care for your sons and daughters."
He added, "In a moment when we were all tested, it became clear that every adult in the Staples community thinks of our students as more than students--they are all of our kids."
Meanwhile in New Jersey, a wave of copycat threats have overwhelmed schools in recent weeks, including before the Parkland, Florida high school massacre on Valentine's Day.
In Essex County, there have been two scares in Nutley and another in West Caldwell, prompting the prosecutor, Robert Laurino, to anounce Tuesday that threats at schools will not be tolerated.
"I want to be loud and clear that these are not juvenile pranks," he said, noting that it's not unusual to see a spike in similar calls for up to a month following tragedies like the Florida school shooting.
Also Tuesday, a Cedar Grove middle schooler was arrested for making a threat on Instagram after he allegedly made a threat on Instagram, according to sources. The student's parents turned over weapons that were at their home. Laurino would not comment further on that case, saying it's still under investigation.
On Monday, Dumont High School in Bergen County was evacuated by SWAT teams in a frightening scene when police said a student made a shooting threat on social media. A student was handcuffed and escorted from school by police, and he has yet to be readmitted to school, superintendent Emanuele Triggiano said Tuesday.
A New York school district will be closed Wednesday after officials say they uncovered a social media threat about a school shooting.
Poughkeepsie city schools will be closed “out of an abundance of caution” after a threat to shoot up the high school emerged online, Superintendent Nicolé Williams said in a statement late Tuesday.
“We are working closely with the City of Poughkeepsie Police Department and the FBI,” Williams said. “The appropriate authorities are actively investigating this issue with the highest priority. The safety of our staff and students is our number one priority.”
Williams added that immediate action has been taken. It wasn’t clear if any arrests have been made.
Further information will be provided as it becomes available, she said.
Charges have been dropped against a man arrested Tuesday after a girl was shot in the back of the head outside a fast food restaurant in Brooklyn.
Authorities said Tuesday night they cuffed the wrong man in the shooting near a Popeye's Louisiana Kitchen at East 83rd Street and Flatlands that put the 8-year-old child in the hospital Monday evening.
It's not clear what led police to charge the man with attempted murder and other charges, or why the charges were later dropped. Police said they're looking for six people in the shooting.
Police said the shooting stemmed from an argument at the fast food restaurant about 5:30 p.m. on Monday. At some point, one of the six people pulled out a gun and fired.
That bullet went into the van the girl was riding in and struck her in the back of the head. The girl was conscious when police -- who had been called to the scene before shots were fired -- arrived, and talked while being taken to the hospital.
Anyone with information about the people involved should call Crime Stoppers at 1-800-577-TIPS.
A scavenger fell through the floor of a vacant building set to be demolished in Brooklyn Tuesday afternoon, according to officials.
The man was looking for building materials in the vacant structure at 463 Rutland Road in Prospect-Lefferts Gardens when the floor gave way about 1 p.m., according to a city Department of Buildings spokeswoman.
The man plunged into a basement and and was buried in debris; authorities said he was taken to the hospital and is expected to survive his wounds.
Chopper 4 footage from over the scene shortly after the accident showed firefighters toiling inside a huge pit, lifting up crumbled pieces of wood as they worked to rescue the man. The scavenger was hoisted from the hole in a stretcher after about 30 minutes and was wearing an oxygen mask and a yellow hardhat.
The spokeswoman said the Buildings Department had ordered the mixed use structure to be demolished on Feb. 12 due to concerns about public safety. An application to tear down the building was approved Tuesday, but other permits had not yet been issued.
The building had 19 open Department of Buildings and city Environmental Control Board violations at the time of the collapse, according to the spokeswoman. Among the violations was one for failing to maintain the building after a partial collapse in November.
No other structures were damaged by Tuesday's collapse, and the Buildings Department said it is continuing to investigate.
It's not clear if the scavenger, who police initially identified as a construction worker, will face charges.
A New York City real estate technology company was filming b-roll at a Brooklyn park when a feature-worthy event got in the shot.
VirtualApt said its 360-degree video-shooting robot was stationed in Bushwick Inlet Park in Williamsburg on Monday afternoon when it accidentally filmed a man getting down on one knee in an apparent proposal. The company said it didn't know the camera had caught the touching moment until afterward and is now trying to find the couple so they can have the footage.
'We saw the proposal and thought it would be nice to share it with the couple so they could have that moment forever on video," a company representative said.
The footage shows the pair sitting on a bench at the East River waterfront, looking curiously in the unattended robot’s direction in the otherwise unoccupied portion of the park.
They both then stand up and embrace for a few seconds before the man reaches into his pocket -- presumably for a ring -- and gets down on one knee.
It wasn’t clear what the man said to the woman, or if she replied with a “yes” because whipping winds drowned out other sounds on the robot’s microphones.
But the woman can be seen putting her hands over her mouth in surprise before leaning down to kiss the man. They then stand there for a few more seconds before the video ends.
The company said the robot's operator, who had left the area to avoid getting in the camera's shot, didn't realize he had captured the apparent proposal until he started going through the footage on Tuesday morning.
That is when the company said it posted the footage on its website, VirtualApt.com, and several social media networks in hopes of finding the couple.
If you recognize the couple, email VirtualApt at info@virtualapt.com.
A New Jersey woman was asked to leave the Metropolitan Museum of Art last weekend after a security guard mistakenly thought she stole clothing from the museum's Costume Institute, according to a published report.
Eliza Vincz, a 26-year-old woman from Burlington, New Jersey, with a hobby for wearing centuries-old clothing, denounced her treatment by a museum security guard last weekend after she said she was told she couldn't be in the museum in a costume, according to NJ.com.
"I was furious and embarrassed. I felt like a criminal in the one place where I get a lot of my inspiration for my clothing. It hurt--it hurt terribly," Vincz told the website.
Vincz reportedly planned her visit to the museum to speak to a group called the Shady Ladies,' for a tour encompassing fashion and beauty in art. Unfortunately, she had to cut her presentation short.
"The Met doesn't have a dress code, but there are guidelines for what visitors can bring in and what activities are allowed in the galleries, and the Museum's security offciers are also there to ensure that anyone entering the building isn't going to unnecessarily disturb fellow visitors or put the art at risk," a museum spokeswoman said in a statement to NJ.com.
Vincz told NJ.com she was simply paying homage to work she held in high regard.
"I felt betrayed--it's really disapppointing that I haven't gotten an apology from a place that is so special to me," she said.
A Long Island elementary school was renamed for Joseph Mcneil, a member of the Greensboro Four who now lives in Hempstead. Greg Cergol reports.
Residents in the Bronx's Co-Op City successfully petitioned to have construction stopped on an LED billboard. Jummy Olabanji reports.
Some Puerto Ricans are not waiting for help to rebuild their communities. Gaby Acevedo reports.
You have insurance, but you could be paying more for the co-pay than the cash price of a prescription. Roseanne Colletti reports on the fight to end so-called prescription gag clauses.
Tenants in New York City Housing Authority buildings are filing suit against the city-run agency. Erica Byfield reports.
Teenagers and young men in one of our area's toughest cities are getting a helping hand onto the pathway to success. Brian Thompson reports.
When a Warren County woman shut down her home business last year she returned some unsold merchandise, expecting a check for more than $4,000. But she waited for months and didn't get a refund from Lularoe. Lynda Baquero reports.
Five Westchester County public school districts went into lockout or lock-in mode for hours Tuesday as cops searched for a possible gunman. Rana Novini reports.
Nearly a dozen people, including several Marines, at Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall fell ill Tuesday after they opened a suspicious letter containing an unknown substance.
The letter was recieved about 3:30 p.m. in Henderson Hall, which Arlington Fire officials described as an administrative building.
A gunnery sergeant opened a letter and showed it to a superior, a Pentagon official told NBC News.
Eleven people began to feel ill, and the building was evacuated. Three of those people were taken to a hospital in stable condition, officials said in a press release.
The Marines affected reported itchy hands and face and bloody noses, a Marine official said. It is unclear how many people suffered from those symptoms.
A large number of police and medics responded to the Northern Virginia military base, which is near the Pentagon and Arlington National Cemetery. The FBI, Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) and local hazardous material teams cleared the building with base police.
The NCIS and FBI are conducting a joint investigation, according to a press release.
Information was not available immediately on what the unknown substance could be.
Stay with News4 for more details on this developing story.
The U.S. intelligence community developed substantial evidence that state websites or voter registration systems in seven states were compromised by Russian-backed covert operatives prior to the 2016 election — but never told the states involved, according to multiple U.S. officials.
Top-secret intelligence requested by President Barack Obama in his last weeks in office identified seven states where analysts — synthesizing months of work — had reason to believe Russian operatives had compromised state websites or databases.
Three senior intelligence officials told NBC News that the intelligence community believed the states as of January 2017 were Alaska, Arizona, California, Florida, Illinois, Texas and Wisconsin.
The officials say systems in the seven states were compromised in a variety of ways, with some breaches more serious than others, from entry into state websites to penetration of actual voter registration databases.
NBC News reached out to all seven states that were compromised, as well as 14 additional states the Department of Homeland Security says were probed during the 2016 election.
To this day, six of the seven states deny they were breached, based on their own cyber investigations.
Talent is never far away in New York City.
As the sun came up over the John F. Kennedy International Airport tarmac on Tuesday morning, traveler Jennifer Harrison heard a sound.
It was singing, and it was coming from the gentleman washing the inside of the windows. As he soaped the window and washed it down, he sung a delightful little tune.
"I had to take a video of him," Harrison said. "It was so beautiful. The gentleman cleaning the window was so full of joy."
As a travel announcement comes over the PA system, the man continues to sing, at one point hitting a stunning high note which he holds for seconds.
When Harrison showed the video to him afterwards she said he commented, “I’m so happy to be working.” She said she now hopes the multi-talented man will be identified and discovered, perhaps even earning himself a place on the "Ellen" show.
Watch the full clip above.
The dream of extending the no. 7 subway line all the way across the Hudson River to New Jersey apparently remains alive.
It was an idea first floated by then-Mayor Michael Bloomberg back in 2010, as the 7 line was still being built to the Hudson Yards station on Manhattan's West Side.
On Tuesday, Port Authority Executive Director Rick Cotton talked about that very idea -- extending the 7 train to New Jersey, via subway tunnel under the Hudson River from 34th Street and 11th Avenue in Manhattan all the way to Secaucus.
But it wouldn't happen until 2040, Cotton said, after the Gateway tunnel project connecting Newark and New York was completed.
Then-MTA Chair Joe Lhota shot down the idea after Bloomberg proposed it, saying he couldn't see it happening "in our lifetime" or "anybody's lifetime." He said the MTA would have to have yards in New Jersey and that there would be "pricing issues."
A subway line running under the river could cost billions.
A 53-year-old married building superintendent in New Jersey has been arrested for allegedly using a ladder to peer through the second-floor window of a girl, a tenant, as she was getting dressed, authorities say.
Cops initially got the call about the "peeping tom" on Fort Lee's Teresa Drive on Valentine's Day. The victim, a minor, told cops Luis DeJesus was looking in her window as she put on her clothes. At the time, cops say DeJesus was the superintendent of the building. It's not clear if he remains the superintendent.
He was arrested after an investigation on charges of invasion of privacy and peering into windows, both fourth-degree crimes. DeJesus was released from custody and is due back in court Friday.
Attorney information for him wasn't immediately available.
A woman in Utah has taken to the streets to try and raise money to have a baby.
Jessica Gales has been married to her husband, Jared, for the past 13 years. They have also been trying to have a baby for about 13 years, with no luck.
Her husband has a rare genetic condition called Kallmann syndrome that directly affects sexual development and makes conception nearly impossible.
Gale not only works at a hair salon, she also works five days a week as a custodian at a local school. Most recently, she's added a third money-making venture.
"I actually never thought I'd be standing on a corner asking for money," she said while holding a sign along University Parkway in Orem on Monday.
Every penny she earns goes directly toward medication for her husband. She hopes to earn enough money to eventually try in vitro fertilization, which she said costs "roughly between $800 and $1,000 a month."
Gale has done yard sales and fundraisers, and now she even plans to shave her head and donate it all if she reaches her goal.
Read more here.
The number of anti-Semitic incidents in the state of New York surged by over 90 percent last year compared to 2016, according to a report released Tuesday.
The 2017 Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents report, released by the Anti-Defamation League, revealed that anti-Semitic incidents increased 57 percent last year compared to 2016. This data marks the largest single-year increase of anti-Semitic incidents across the United States on record.
There were 380 incidents of anti-Semitism in the state of New York in 2017 — including physical assaults, vandalism, harassment, and attacks on Jewish institutions. In 2016, 200 incidents were reported.
The Anti-Defamation League is a civil rights organization that aims to stop bigotry and anti-Semitism. Since 1979, it has counted anti-Semitic incidents in the country.
“New Yorkers are seeing an undeniable surge of anti-Semitism and bigotry that we all must confront,” Evan R. Bernstein, the ADL New York regional director, said in a statement.
According to the Anti-Defamation League, New York continues to experience more incidents than any other state. More than half of all anti-Semitic assaults committed nationwide were reported in New York.
Among the 380 incidents reported in 2017 in New York State there were 236 incidents of vandalism — up from 146 incidents in 2016. There were also 133 incidents of harassment, including bomb threats against Jewish institutions. This number is up from 35 in 2016, according to the organization.
Last year, various bomb threats were made to Jewish Community Centers across the United States — including in Westchester and Rochester.
The number of assaults in 2017 decreased from 19 in 2016 to 11, according to the organization.
The Anti-Defamation League also reveals that New York saw a doubling of incidents in K-12 schools from 18 incidents in 2016 to 36 in 2017 and a 130 percent increase on college campuses.
Looking at geographical data, the Anti-Defamation League reports that there were 99 anti-Semitic incidents reported last year in Manhattan. There were also 80 in Brooklyn, 39 in Queens, nine in The Bronx and seven in Staten Island. Additionally, there were 62 reported incidents in Long Island, 18 in Westchester, 12 in Rockland County and 54 in upstate New York.
New Jersey reported 208 incidents — a 32 percent increase from the 157 incidents reported in 2016. The data makes it the state with the third most anti-Semitic incidents in 2017.
According to the Anti-Defamation League, it is addressing anti-Semitic incidents and behavior through youth education in order to prevent further incidents from taking place.
The Anti-Defamation League is also working with law enforcement agencies. The organization’s New York chapter trained more than 550 law enforcement officials last year and reached students in 175 schools through anti-bias and anti-bullying training.
“We are redoubling our efforts to educate, advocate and engage schools, law enforcement, elected leaders and community leaders to ensure we are standing together against anti-Semitism and bigotry,” Bernstein said.
The organization is recommending public officials and law enforcement agencies to speak out against anti-Semitic incidents and all other acts of hate. It is also asking victims and bystanders to report anti-Semitic incidents and vandalism to local police and to the organization. Additionally, it is also asking for college administrators, faculty and staff to receive training to effectively respond to anti-Semitic incidents, hate crimes, hate speech and extremism on their campuses.
Last year, Gov. Andrew Cuomo unveiled a $25 million grant program to combat hate crimes and anti-Semitism across the state of New York. Cuomo also announced monetary rewards for any information leading to the arrest of someone suspected of a hate crime.
The Winter Olympics is synonymous with skating, snowboarding and…curling?
This year, the U.S. men’s curling team managed to shock the world by sneaking up from behind and winning the gold for the very first time, causing quite the upset for Sweden. Needless to say, curling caused a buzz in the states.
The sport never fails to peek viewer’s interest. After the broadcast of the Olympics, local curling clubs often see an increase in business.
According to reports, the number of U.S. curling clubs registered with the national organization USA Curling has nearly doubled, from 99 to 185 since 2000.
Plainfield Curling Club in South Plainfield, New Jersey, is the only dedicated curling club in the state. It is a not-for-profit organization owned by members and operated by volunteers.
Curling season for the club runs from October to April with nine weeknight and weekend leagues for members.
Those who are interested in giving curling a try can normally attend the Curling Experience, a two-hour session where patrons can learn the basics of delivery and sweeping and play a short game.
Their website warns those who are interested for the Curling Experience events that all slots are all sold out through April. There are however always opportunities to become a member and join.
Ed Veltre is the president of the Plainfield Curling Club. He says that with the Olympics, there is always a peek because of the television coverage.
Veltre says that it does lull during the off years, but the club tries to maintain an even flow of curlers.
A 24-year-old Vernon man is accused of sending an email that said he was going to be the next school shooter and has been arrested, according to state police.
State police said they began investigating when a Connecticut television news station contacted them after receiving an emailed tip from 24-year-old Oscar Rodriguez, of Rockville, around 9 p.m. Monday that said he was going to be the next school shooter. No school was specifically mentioned, according to state police.
Vernon police said no direct threat was made to Vernon schools, but investigators have been in touch with Vernon school officials to make them aware of the situation.
“This person did not pose a credible threat to any Vernon School. The Vernon Police and School officials work collaboratively to ensure the safety and security of all students and staff,” Supt. Joseph Macary said in a statement.
Police said they always take threats like this very seriously and investigate.
“This is a situation where the threat wasn’t credible, but nonetheless it’s still a crime. It’s still certainly a threatening incident and certainly a breach of peace and anytime these incidents occur they are going to be investigated completely, whether it is the state police or local police department because it is certainly something we take very serious,” Sgt. Eric Haglund, of Connecticut State Police, said.
Police arrested Rodriguez at his apartment on Prospect Street after an incident that prompted an evacuation of the building and response from the fire department.
Officials said Rodriguez tried to fill the home with natural gas. No one was hurt and police did not find any weapons when they searched Rodriguez’s residence.
He was taken into custody and has been charged with first-degree threatening and breach of peace, threatening. Vernon police said they are still investigating and expect to file more charges.
Bond was set at $250,000. Rodriguez was unable to post bond and is due in court today.
This is one of several arrests police have made in several towns after investigating threatening messages in the wake of the school shooting in Parkland, Florida that left 17 people dead.
Police urge anyone who sees or hears anything suspicious to report it.
“We want anybody that sees anything suspicious or hears anything or overhear something or sees something that any reference of that sort of behavior to certainly contact us -- your local police department, the state police department. If you’re a student, let your parents know or let administration know at the school because again it is something that we do take very serious and we are going to put the effort to making sure that we determine who it is,” Haglund said.
A Michigan man is facing a peeping charge after a 14-year-old girl spotted a cellphone recording in the restroom of a Grand Rapids sandwich shop.
"I can't even describe to you the feeling that I had. I just know my blood was boiling, my adrenaline was flowing and I wanted to see blood," the girl's father Quantez Phillips said.
The incident happened Saturday at a Penn Station East Coast Subs in Grand Rapids. The 14-year-old girl saw the smartphone perched on a light in the women's restroom and told her father.
Phillips informed restaurant staff and then took to Facebook Live to show that the phone was recording and to warn others.
"My daughter has been violated so I feel like it's my duty to protect my daughter, and being in a public restroom, I didn't think I would have to protect her," Phillips said.
Kent County jail records show 20-year-old Brandyn Rosa, an employee at the sandwich shop, is being held on a felony charge of capturing/distributing an image of an unclothed person.
Read more here.
New Yorkers are freaking out about a pair of subway performers who sound eerily like the Beatles.
Matt Whitlock, a former music writer, tweeted a video Sunday of the buskers performing "She Loves You" at a 14th Street subway station.
"One thing you have to do today is watch this video of Amiri and Rahiem Taylor covering the Beatles -- they sound exactly like Lennon/McCartney and it gives me serious chills," Whitlock wrote.
The video has been viewed more than 2 million times in less than two days, and retweeted over 41,000 times and liked 128,000 times.
"This can't be real," one stunned viewer commented. "That's dead on point."
"Creepy how they sound alike!" said another.
The resemblance was so uncanny that some doubted the performance was real.
"Sounds dubbed," said one skeptic, to which the performers -- a band calling themselves Blac Rabbit -- jumped into the conversation to say, "Lol wish we had the tech to dub ourselves out there!"
Identical twin brothers Amiri and Rahiem Taylor, from Bedford-Stuyvesant, say on their website that while they grew up surrounded by hip-hop, they had more exposure to pop, funk and soul from the '60s through the '80s. They taught themselves to play guitar and write songs based on the Beatles, learning from "arguably the greatest songwriting duo of all time," and the Taylor brothers now create what they call their own "psychedelic rock tunes."
They began busking to make some pocket money, and found a receptive audience on the subway with their Beatles covers. The brothers say they're continuing to perform on the subway while performing original music at venues across the city.
Stephen King and Russell Crowe are among the celebrities who have retweeted Whitlock's video of Blac Rabbit.
First lady Melania Trump cut ties with a senior adviser whose company was paid nearly $26 million by President Donald Trump’s inaugural committee, the first lady’s office confirmed to NBC News.
Trump “severed the gratuitous services contract” with Stephanie Winston Wolkoff, a spokeswoman said.
The move comes after reports that the inaugural committee led by Donald Trump's friend Tom Barrack paid a company called WIS Media Partners $25.8 million for "event production services."
Wolkoff, a former fashion executive and event planner best known for planning the Met Gala, founded the firm a month before President Trump's inauguration, The New York Times reported.
Property taxes can be a burden depending on where you live.
Some states can have property taxes in the hundreds of dollars, while residents in other states will have to pay thousands a year.
WalletHub conducted a study to determine the states with 2018’s highest and lowest real estate and vehicle property taxes in the nation.
The U.S. Census Bureau estimates that the average American household spends $2,197 on property taxes for their homes annually and residents of 27 states with vehicle property taxes will shell out an additional $436, WalletHub reports.
The study found that, not only does the tri-state rank among the states with the highest real-estate property taxes, but one of the states in the region is at the top of the list.
WalletHub determined that New Jersey is the state with the highest real estate property tax. Garden state residents pay about $4,437 annually in taxes on an $185,000 home — the median value of a home in the country as of 2016, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. However, since the median home value in the state is $316,000, residents in the Garden State shell out $7,601 in taxes, the study says.
With a real estate property tax rate of 2.02 percent, Connecticut comes in fourth place among the states with the highest real estate property taxes.
Connecticut residents can expect to pay $3,733 in real estate taxes on an $185,000 home. With the average home value in the state being $239,300, residents actually shell out approximately $5,443 a year in real estate property taxes, the study reveals.
Rhode Island and New York are tied with real estate property tax rates at 1.65 percent. However, New Yorkers will pay more in taxes than Rhode Islanders.
On an $185,000 home, a New York resident will pay about $3,057, but with an average state home value of $286,300, New Yorkers will shell out about $4,738 in real estate property taxes annually.
The state with the lowest real estate property taxes is found in the middle of the Pacific Ocean.
Hawaii has a real estate tax rate of 0.27 percent. A Hawaii resident will pay $501 dollars on a home assessed at $185,000. However, since Hawaii has the most expensive real estate market of all the states with the median home value being $538,400, a resident will end up paying $1,459, according to WalletHub. Far less compared to New Jersey’s taxes, but far more than the state with the second lowest real estate property tax — Alabama.
Residents of Alabama will pay $791 on a home valued at $185,000. However, since the median home value in the state is $128,000, residents will end up paying about $550 in real estate property taxes annually.
Though New York and New Jersey pay a pretty penny when it comes to real estate property taxes, these states do not vehicle property taxes.
The same cannot be said for Connecticut. With a vehicle property tax rate of 2.54 percent, the state has the fifth highest vehicle property taxes in the nation. A resident can expect to pay about $609 on a $24,000 car annually, according to WalletHub.
The study also revealed that red states impose lower real estate property taxes than blue states.
The Florida mother whose anguish was captured in a now-iconic photograph from the Parkland school shooting called comments made by a National Rifle Association spokeswoman at a conservative gathering over the weekend "despicable" and "vile."
Speaking to an audience at the Conservative Political Action Conference near Washington, D.C., NRA spokeswoman Dana Loesch said journalists from the mainstream media "love mass shootings" because "crying white mothers are ratings gold."
"I’m not saying you love the tragedy, but you love the ratings. Crying white mothers are ratings gold," Loesch said. "And notice that I said ‘crying white mothers’ because there are thousands of grieving black mothers in Chicago every weekend. Where’s the CNN town hall for Chicago?"
Cathi Rush's two sons are enrolled at Majory Stoneman Douglas High School and survived the Feb 14. mass shooting that left 17 people dead. She described the moments surrounding the photo that depicted the panic and fear felt by hundreds of parents as they waited for answers outside the school.
“We were just screaming and crying together. And I didn't know, I didn’t know about my children and I really hope that Dana from the NRA never has to experience that,” Rush told NBC 6.
She continued, "I mean, does she have no sympathy, no empathy at all. I truly believe that it's vile, it’s a wretched disgusting thing for her to say.”
Rush said she doesn't know whether Loesch's comments were about her photo because "there were lots of moms crying," but noted she hates that image because it forces her to relive the panic of not being able to find her sons every time she sees it.
She recalled racing to the high school when she learned about the shooting. Her 11th-grade son had evacuated but her younger son, who is ninth grade, was still inside the building. She later learned he had sheltered in place when they finally reunited several hours later.
Rush says both of her children will return to the school on Wednesday as classes resume for the first time since the mass shooting.
قال وزير الفلاحة والصيد البحري المغربي عزيز أخنوش، إن اتفاق الصيد البحري المبرم بين المغرب والاتحاد الأوروبي سيبقى ساري المفعول، مضيفا في تعليقه على قرار المحكمة الأوروبية حول ملف الصيد البحري في سواحل الأقاليم الجنوبية للمملكة المغربية، أن قرار المحكمة الأوروبية متناقض مع رأي المدعي العام الأوروبي.
وخيبت المحكمة المعروفة اختصارا بـ”CJUE” آمال المغرب بعدما استثنى قرارها الأقاليم الصحراوية من اتفاقية الصيد البحري مع الاتحاد الأوروبي.
وأصدرت محكمة العدل الأوروبية، اليوم الثلاثاء، حكمها البات بشأن تجديد الاتفاقية بين المملكة المغربية والاتحاد الأوربي، بعدما أثار مكتب محاماة يمثل وهي منظمة بريطانية غير حكومية مساندة لأطروحة “البوليساريو”.
وتسمح اتفاقية الصيد البحري للسفن الأوروبية، التي دخلت حيز التنفيذ في 2014 لمدة أربع سنوات قابلة للتجديد، تنتهي يوم 14 يوليوز 2018، بدخول منطقة الصيد الأطلسية للمغرب، مقابل 30 مليون أورو سنوياً يدفعها الاتحاد الأوروبي، إضافة إلى 10 ملايين أورو مساهمة من أصحاب السفن.
ذكرت مصادر مطلعة أن سعد الدين العثماني ، أبدى موافقته على الصيغة التي جرى اقتراحها من أجل ضمان استمرار نظام المعاشات الخاصة بأعضاء الغرفة الأولى مع إدخال جملة من الإصلاحات العميقة على هذا الصندوق، ومنها ربط الحصول على المعاش ببلوغ 65 سنة.
وأكدت المصادر ذاتها ، أنه بالرغم من اعتراض فريق “المصباح” بمجلس النواب على الصيغة المقترحة وتشبثه في وقت سابق بإلغاء النظام بشكل نهائي، إلا أن العثماني أبدى موافقته على المشروع، وهو ما يعني دفع فريقه إلى الانخراط في مقترح القانون، الذي يصب في اتجاه إصلاح دون اتخاذ قرار بتصفيته، في الوقت الذي كان فيه نواب “البيجيدي” يطالبون بإلغاء صندوق تقاعد البرلمانيين.
تتوالى على فيسبوك تدوينات المغاربة التي تتفاعل مع العملية التي أجراها صاحب الجلالة الملك محمد السادس، حفظه الله، اليوم الإثنين 26 فبراير 2018، والتي كللت بالنجاح.
وبحسب بلاغ صادر عن الأطباء المعالجون لجلالة الملك ، فقد أوصوا أنه بعد فترة راحة، سيباشر جلالة الملك، حفظه الله، مهامه الاعتيادية، دون أي مانع.
ويواصل مغاربة الفيسبوك في هذه الأثناء التعبير عن تعاطفهم مع جلالة الملك مع الدعاء له بالشفاء العاجل.