From the Wires
Fuel-bearing Ship Just 6 Miles From Nome
This image provided by the U.S. Coast Guard from the bridge camera aboard the Ice Breaker Healy taken at 4:01 a.m. EST shows lites on the shore line as the Healy and the tanker approach Nome Alaska Friday Jan. 13, 2012. At the time of this image the Healy was 9.2 miles from Nome. (AP Photo/US Coast Guard)(Credit: AP) ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A Russian tanker hauling much-needed fuel across the ice-choked ocean to the Alaska city of Nome is just six miles from its destination.
A Coast Guard icebreaker has cut a path through ocean ice to help the vessel with its cargo of 1.3 million gallons of fuel reach Nome.
Coast Guard official Adam De Rocher says the ship reached the area early Friday but was waiting until daylight before advancing further. Daylight doesn’t come to that part of Alaska until 11:30 a.m. (1:30 p.m. PST).
De Rocher says crews are waiting for light because it will be safer going through the ice and they will have a better idea of where to anchor to start unloading fuel.
The city missed its final pre-winter delivery of fuel by barge when a big storm swept the region last fall. Without the delivery, Nome could run short of fuel before another barge arrives in late spring, forcing fuel to be flown in and raising prices as high as $9 a gallon.
Meanwhile, the Coast Guard is urging Nome residents to stay off the ice to view the two vessels because its unsafe with the ships around.
Hundreds of salmonella cases tied to chicks
ATLANTA (AP) — Those cute mail-order chicks that wind up in children’s Easter baskets and backyard farms have been linked to more than 300 cases of salmonella in the U.S. — mostly in youngsters — since 2004.
An estimated 50 million live poultry are sold through the mail each year in the United States in a business that has been booming because of the growing popularity of backyard chicken farming as a hobby among people who like the idea of raising their own food.
But health officials are warning of a bacterial threat on the birds’ feet, feathers, beaks and eggs.
Continue Reading CloseAward-winning illustrator Leo Dillon dead at 79
NEW YORK (AP) — Leo Dillon, the groundbreaking illustrator who collaborated with his wife, Diane, on dozens of books for kids and adults and became the first African-American to win the Caldecott Medal for children’s books, has died. He was 79.
Dillon died May 26 at Long Island College Hospital from complications after lung surgery, publisher Scholastic Inc. announced Wednesday. Harlan Ellison, a close friend, wrote on his website that “Half my soul for 50 years went with him.”
Continue Reading CloseUS again imposes clean-energy tariffs on China
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration is moving to impose stiff new tariffs on wind-energy towers made in China, the latest strike in an escalating trade war over clean energy.
The Commerce Department said in a preliminary decision Wednesday that Chinese companies have received government subsidies on steel wind towers ranging from about 14 percent to 26 percent. The decision could result in tariffs of those amounts being imposed on about a dozen Chinese companies that export large numbers of steel wind towers to the United States.
It follows a Commerce Department decision this month to impose tariffs averaging about 31 percent on solar cells and panels imported from China.
China has called the U.S. action on solar equipment unfair and warned that higher tariffs could hurt efforts to promote clean energy.
US levies new sanctions on key Syrian bank
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration added new sanctions on a Syrian bank Wednesday as a top White House official said the U.S. wants to economically throttle the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad and cut off salaries of pro-government thugs blamed for the grisly massacre in Houla.
The Treasury Department said the Syria International Islamic Bank has been acting as a front for other Syrian financial institutions seeking to circumvent sanctions. The new penalties will prohibit the SIIB from engaging in financial transactions in the U.S. and will freeze any assets under U.S. jurisdiction.
Continue Reading CloseCorps: Fort Peck Dam repair may top $225 million
BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers says the price tag on proposed fixes to Montana’s Fort Peck Dam following major flooding along the Missouri River could top $225 million.
But with money short, Corps officials said Wednesday they will be able to afford only $46 million in interim fixes for now.
Record snowfalls and massive spring rains in Wyoming and Montana last year prompted the release of unprecedented volumes of water from the Corps’ six Missouri River dams.
The torrent damaged Fort Peck’s spillway gates and eroded areas downstream from the dam, located at the top of the Missouri River system.
Fort Peck Project Manager John Daggett says the planned repairs will ensure the spillway can be used to safely release water during future flooding.
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