Nurses' union reaches tentative agreement with L.I. hospital
There's an update on the nurses strike planned for Monday at South Shore University Hospital Northwell Health on Long Island.
There's an update on the nurses strike planned for Monday at South Shore University Hospital Northwell Health on Long Island.
Protests by Israel’s reserve forces took an unusual turn over the weekend as navy veterans donned wetsuits and tried to reach Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s private seaside villa by rowing.
Parents in the Los Angeles school district are forced to scramble as a three-day strike looms. Child care and how to feed their children are top of mind.
French President Emmanuel Macron said Sunday he hoped his bitterly contested pensions reform plan, forced through parliament without a vote, could complete "its democratic journey", a day before crucial votes in parliament.The controversial legislation, which has led to months of protests in parliament and on the streets, will be adopted in parliament Monday unless either of two motions of no-confidence in the government passes."After months of political and social consultation and more than 170 hours of debate which resulted in the vote of a compromise text between the (two parliamentary chambers)...", Macron expressed his wish "that the text on pensions can go to the end of its democratic journey with respect for all".His words came in a statement issued by the president's office to AFP.If passed, Macron's reform would raise the legal retirement age from 62 to 64 as well as increasing the number of years people must pay into the system to receive a full pension.The government's decision last week to resort to Article 49.3 of the constitution to force the bill through parliament without a vote has prompted anger in the streets after weeks of mostly peaceful protests.Two leading members of the right-wing Republicans party, whose leader has said they will not support no-confidence motions, reported threats and intimidation against them Sunday.Monday's two no-confidence motions have been filed by a small group of centrist MPs and the far-right National Rally.If the no-confidence motions fall, as most observers expect will happen, left-wing deputies have said they will appeal to the Constitutional Council, to challenge the way the government forced through the reform."There will be no majority to bring the government down, but it will be a moment of truth," Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said of the two efforts to unseat the cabinet planned for Monday afternoon.- 'Growing resentment' -The government's decision last week to resort to Article 49.3 of the constitution -- which allows for the forcing of a bill through parliament without a vote -- led to a fourth consecutive day of protests on Sunday."I'm overwhelmed with a feeling of immense anger," Isabelle Desprez, a 54-year-old maths teacher demonstrating in the northern city of Lille, told AFP.Laurent Berger, head of the moderate CFDT union, told Liberation newspaper: "We went from the feeling of being despised to a feeling of anger, in particular because we deprived employees of the result of their protests"."The growing resentment and anger must serve the demonstrations in a peaceful framework and not be politically exploited," he added.A ninth day of strikes and protests is planned for Thursday.Police on Saturday closed Paris' Place de la Concorde opposite parliament for demonstrations following two successive nights of clashes.Some 122 people were arrested as some set rubbish bins on fire, destroyed bus stops and erected improvised barricades around a 4,000-strong demonstration in the capital.On Sunday, police arrested another 17 people as protesters invaded the Les Halles shopping complex in central Paris.Away from the streets of major cities, the CGT said Saturday that workers would shut down France's largest oil refinery in Normandy, warning that two more could follow on Monday.So far, strikers have only prevented fuel deliveries from leaving refineries but not completely halted operations.Industrial action has also halted rubbish collection in much of Paris, with thousands of tonnes of waste now on the streets, even as the government forces some binmen back to work using requisition powers.The government says the pensions reforms are needed to avoid crippling deficits in the coming decades linked to France's ageing population."Those among us who can will gradually need to work more to finance our social model, which is one of the most generous in the world," Le Maire said.But opponents of the reform say the law places an unfair burden on low earners, women and people doing physically wearing jobs, and polls have consistently showed majorities opposed to the changes.On Monday over half a million high school students will begin the first day of the 2023 Baccalaureat exams, against a backdrop of strike threats by supervisors. burs-ea/jj
STORY: At a depot near Paris, garbage collectors take turns to guard the entrance to the incinerator that burns the city's trash.They're striking over French President Emmanuel Macron's pension reform, like many other workers.It's been two weeks now that Regis Vieceli, Secretary General of the CGT garbage collectors' union in Paris, has been eating and sleeping on the picket line with his colleagues.This is the boudoir, and out here is the garden he says, giving Reuters a tour of their camp. Vieceli says Paris produces 1,000 tons of garbage each day and it has piled up on the capital's streets.That has annoyed some Parisians and Vieceli says the workers don't like it either."It breaks our hearts also to see Paris' streets in this state. Our job is for Paris to be clean everywhere and for everyone, not just for Parisians. Let's not forget that Paris is the most touristic capital in the world and so on..."Last week, the government pushed the reform through parliament without a vote. It says it needs to raise the pension age by two years to ensure the system doesn't go bust.That move prompted unrest - after weeks of protest - that poses a grave challenge to Macron's authority.On Saturday (March 18) morning, ten of the striking trash collectors were requisitioned by the police to go out and work. Vieceli says that won't be enough to clear the streets.A day of nationwide industrial action is scheduled for Thursday (March 23) and garbage collectors, like other sectors, are getting ready. Vieceli is planning for them to wear their distinctive green overalls.He tells them: you'll be heroes on that day.
The L.A. Unified School District contends that Local 99 acted illegally in calling a three-day strike, starting Tuesday. For now, the strike is still on.
Laurie Perez provides the latest on the looming LAUSD employee strike with less than 48 hours until the scheduled walkout. With so little time, parents are scrambling to figure out what they can do with their children during the possible three-day strike.
Emmanuel Macron “regrets nothing” after short-circuiting parliament to ram through a deeply unpopular pension reform, say aides, as fresh protests on Saturday raised fears of a new “yellow vest” protest movement. Demonstrations took place in cities including Bordeaux in the southwest, Compiegne in the north, Nantes in the west and Saint-Etienne in central France.
Rail passengers battled with more travel chaos this weekend and face further industrial action by train workers over the coming weeks.
France on Saturday banned protests opposite parliament after a second night of unrest sparked by President Emmanuel Macron imposing an unpopular pension overhaul without a parliament vote.Paris police on Saturday banned crowds at the capital's Place de la Concorde across the Seine river from parliament, after spontaneous gatherings there the two previous nights led to clashes between some demonstrators and security forces.
Security guards at London's Heathrow Airport will walk off their jobs for 10 days over the Easter break, the latest in a wave of strike action to affect the U.K. The union Unite said Friday more than 1,400 security guards employed by Heathrow Airport, one of Europe's busiest, will strike from March 31 to Easter Sunday, April 9, to demand better pay. Unite said those striking include guards who work at the airport's Terminal Five, which is used exclusively by British Airways, as well as those responsible for checking all cargo that enters the airport.
The party on South Beach has not stopped despite shootings in back-to-back days.
"He probably watches my movies on repeat which may be why he has so many typos. (Slippery fingers from lube and KFC)," she said of Trump.
While Trump faces the possibility of indictment for his "hush-money" payment to Stormy Daniels, a similar case unfolded in 2011 against John Edwards.
There have been multiple, brutal fights at San Francisco's Stonestown Galleria shopping center involving young people. Da Lin reports. (3-19-23)
After reaching a plea agreement, teenager Reid Mitchell will serve 120 days in jail and 10 years on probation for the assault of Cole Hagan.
His parents are concerned it may be too much pressure for him.
Kate Middleton is giving everyone a Mother’s Day treat by sharing a never-before-seen photo of her and Prince William’s three kids doing something that shows the one trait they all definitely have in common with their mama. For UK Mother’s Day, on March 19, the Princess of Wales shared a seriously sweet snapshot of her […]
The former Republican president said on Saturday that he expects to be arrested on Tuesday in a case involving hush money paid to women who alleged sexual encounters with the former president.
Dillon Brooks and Klay Thompson traded words near the end of the Grizzlies' win over the Warriors. It also continued postgame
“It’s not fair, but that’s what life is,” said Lionel Richie, as struggling single mom Fire Wilmore, who'd hoped that 'American Idol' would turn her family's life around, stood humiliated in front of her child.