Labor Day snapshot: 7 stats about American workers
Published Thu, 28 Nov 2024 13:41:51 GMT
By Anna Helhoski and Taryn Phaneuf | NerdWalletWhen Labor Day became a federal holiday in 1894 — well before artificial intelligence and remote work — the American workforce faced other significant disruptions.Workers were beginning to leave the farming jobs that, up until the 1880s, had made up over half the workforce, according to a 1966 Wesleyan University study. Many of those farmers, as well as new immigrants, headed to growing cities for industrial work.Then the industrial workforce changed, too. Manufacturing, as a percentage of the nonfarm workforce, peaked in 1953 at 32%, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). As of July 2023, that figure stands at 8%.Since 1948, when the BLS began collecting employment figures, the nonfarming workforce has increased fivefold — and continues to evolve.The last few pandemic-scrambled years have seen a huge spike in unemployment followed by an equally dramatic decline, as well as a work-from-home movement for office workers t...Hong Kong, other parts of south China grind to near standstill as powerful Typhoon Saola passes
Published Thu, 28 Nov 2024 13:41:51 GMT
HONG KONG (AP) — Most of Hong Kong and other parts of southern China ground to a near standstill Friday with classes and flights canceled as powerful Typhoon Saola passed along the coast. Many workers stayed at home and students in various cities saw the start of their school year postponed to next week. Trading on Hong Kong’s stock market was suspended and hundreds of people were stranded at the airport after about 460 flights were canceled in the key regional business and travel hub.Rail authorities in mainland China halted all trains entering or leaving Guangdong province from Friday night to Saturday evening, state television CCTV reported.The Hong Kong Observatory issued a No. 10 hurricane signal, the highest warning under the city’s weather system. It was the first No. 10 warning since Super Typhoon Mangkhut hit Hong Kong in 2018.The observatory said Saola — with maximum sustained winds of 195 kilometers (121 miles) per hour — came its closest to the financial hub at aro...Stock market today: Wall Street is mixed following data that shows the labor market is cooling
Published Thu, 28 Nov 2024 13:41:51 GMT
NEW YORK — Stocks turned mixed on Wall Street in afternoon trading Friday as investors weigh the implications of a new government report showing that U.S. job growth increased at a healthy but more moderate pace last month. The major indexes have wavered between small gains and losses after rising as much as 0.8% in the early going. Stocks initially got a boost from the jobs report, which supports investors’ hopes that the Federal Reserve will hold off on raising interest rates again in its bid to lower inflation. The indexes gave back most of their early gains as bond yields began ticking higher.The S&P 500 was up 0.1%. The benchmark index is coming off its first monthly loss since February, but is on pace for its second straight weekly gain.The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 69 points, or 0.2%, to 34,791 as of 1:38 p.m. Eastern. The Nasdaq composite slipped 0.1%.The Labor Department reported Friday that employers added a solid 187,000 jobs in August. The job growth marked...Police identify suspect in fatal double shooting in Toronto’s west end
Published Thu, 28 Nov 2024 13:41:51 GMT
Toronto police have identified a suspect in a fatal double shooting in the city’s west end that claimed the life of a 23-year-old man and left a woman with injuries.Officers responded to reports of a shooting in the Northcliffe Boulevard and St. Clair Avenue West area on Thursday, Aug. 24, at around 7:35 p.m.Police say a man walked into a restaurant in the area asking for help because he had been shot.The man, identified as Nakhari Negus Henry-Robinson, 23, of Toronto, (pictured below) was later pronounced dead at hospital.Emergency crews found a second victim in the area — a 51-year-old woman.She was treated at hospital for non-life-threatening injuries.Photo of homicide victim Nakhari Negus Henry-Robinson. HANDOUT/Toronto Police ServiceOn Friday, police issued an arrest warrant for a suspect.Ridge Kazumba, 26, of Toronto, is wanted on a Canada-wide warrant for second-degree murder.He’s described as approximately six feet tall with a medium-heavy build, brown eyes...Metal factory explosion in Brazil kills 2 people and injures several others
Published Thu, 28 Nov 2024 13:41:51 GMT
SAO PAULO (AP) — An explosion Friday at a metal factory in southern Brazil killed two people and seriously injured at least 12 others, state officials said. Dozens of firefighters and rescue teams were sent to the site of the explosion in the countryside city of Cabreuva in Sao Paulo state, Gov. Tarcisio de Freitas said on social media. Cabreuva lies about 90 kilometers (about 60 miles) northwest of the city of Sao Paulo.Footage on Brazilian TV broadcasters showed the factory completely destroyed by the explosion.Local media outlets said the blast was triggered by overheating equipment, and that hospitals in the area had been warned there would be a big influx of injured patients. The Associated PressGun and drug charges filed against Myon Burrell, sent to prison for life as teen but freed in 2020
Published Thu, 28 Nov 2024 13:41:51 GMT
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Prosecutors filed gun and drug charges Friday against Myon Burrell, who was sent to prison for life as a teenager but was set free in 2020 after 18 years behind bars after his sentence was commuted in a high-profile murder case.Burrell, now 37, was arrested in the Minneapolis suburb of Robbinsdale on Tuesday after police said they found a handgun and drugs in his SUV during a traffic stop. His prosecution and harsh punishment in the murder case raised questions about the integrity of the criminal justice system that put him away for the death 11-year-old Tyesha Edwards, of Minneapolis, who was killed by a stray bullet as she was doing her homework in 2008. The Associated Press and APM Reports in 2020 uncovered new evidence and serious flaws in that police investigation, ultimately leading to the creation of an independent national legal panel to review the case, which led the state pardons board to commute Burrell’s sentence. However, his request for a pardo...Death toll from Johannesburg fire rises to 76 as city turns to tough job of identifying victims
Published Thu, 28 Nov 2024 13:41:51 GMT
JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Search teams finished checking a derelict Johannesburg apartment building a day after one of South Africa’s deadliest fires broke out there as pathologists faced the grisly task Friday of identifying charred bodies and body parts that were transported in large trucks to mortuaries across the city.The death toll from Thursday’s predawn blaze rose to 76 after two people died in a hospital overnight, Health Minister Joe Phaahla told reporters. At least 12 of the victims were children, authorities said.Homeless South Africans, poor foreign migrants and others who found themselves marginalized in a city often referred to as Africa’s richest but which has deep social problems inhabited the downtown building.The number of injured people hospitalized from the fire also increased to 88, according to a provincial health official.After conducting three searches through each of the building’s five stories, emergency services personnel believed that all huma...‘Please share the road’: OPP reminding motorists to drive safely over long weekend
Published Thu, 28 Nov 2024 13:41:51 GMT
The unofficial end of summer is here, and with many hitting the road over the Labour Day long weekend provincial police are asking motorists to drive safely — with a sobering reminder.“Two hundred and thirty nine people have died already this year in road collisions” OPP Sgt. Kerry Schmidt said on X, the site formerly known as Twitter.“In the last five years, 946 people have died and when we look at those collisions, over half of them died as a result of one of the leading causes of death and injury on our highways. We call them the ‘big four’: aggressive driving, impaired driving, distracted driving, and not wearing your seatbelt.”Schmidt said there were five fatal incidents during last year’s Labour Day long weekend including two road deaths.He’s asking anyone travelling the roads this weekend to be sure they’re making good decisions.“Wherever you are, please share the road,” Schmidt said. “Use your safety equipment, focus on the task of driving, obey the s...Proud Boy who smashed Capitol window on Jan. 6 gets 10 years in prison, then declares, ‘Trump won!’
Published Thu, 28 Nov 2024 13:41:51 GMT
WASHINGTON (AP) — A former member of the far-right Proud Boys extremist group who smashed a window at the U.S. Capitol in the building’s first breach of the Jan. 6, 2021, riot was sentenced on Friday to 10 years in prison — and then defiantly declared as he walked out of the courtroom, “Trump won!”The sentence for Dominic Pezzola is the latest handed down after leaders of the group were convicted of spearheading an attack aimed at preventing the peaceful transfer of power from Donald Trump to Joe Biden after the 2020 presidential election.Pezzola, 46, took a police officer’s riot shield and used it to smash the window, allow rioters to make the first breach into the Capitol, and he later filmed a “celebratory video” with a cigar inside the building, prosecutors said. He was a recent Proud Boys recruit, however, and a jury acquitted him of the most high-profile charge, seditious conspiracy, a rarely brought Civil War-era offense. He was convicted of other serious charges, and p...Civil rights group wants independent probe into the record number of deaths in Alaska prisons
Published Thu, 28 Nov 2024 13:41:51 GMT
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — A civil rights group is asking the state court system to order an independent investigation into the Alaska Department of Corrections after a record number of deaths were reported last year.The request from the American Civil Liberties Union of Alaska came Thursday when it announced separate lawsuits against the state Department of Corrections on behalf of two men who died by suicide while in prison in the last year, the Anchorage Daily News reported.The lawsuits, filed jointly by the organization and private attorneys on behalf of family members of the two men, seeks financial settlements and the outside investigation.“There must be greater accountability and transparency on behalf of the Department of Corrections to prevent these tragedies from occurring,” Ruth Botstein, the ACLU of Alaska’s legal director, said at a news conference.Neither the the Alaska Department of Corrections nor the attorney general’s office had been served with the lawsuits by...Latest news
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