Future Hall of Famer has three goals in two wins over the Canucks this season and career 1.43 points per game against Vancouver is his highest output against any NHL club.
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Published Jan 29, 2025 • Last updated 8 hours ago • 4 minute read
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Jonathan Marchessault of the Predators gets puck Vincent Desharnais of the Canucks during Jan. 3 meeting at Rogers Arena. Marchessault, Steven Stamkos and Filip Forsberg form a dangerous first line.Photo by Rich Lam /Getty Images
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When/where: Wednesday, 6 p.m., Bridgestone Arena
TV: SN Pacific. Radio: Sportsnet 650
The buzz: A quick flick of the wrist, or a howitzer.
That’s how Predators centre Steven Stamkos continues to deliver a deadly dagger to the Canucks, even at age 34.
The future Hall of Famer has struck three times in two triumphs over Vancouver this season, and his career 1.43 points per game against the Canucks is his highest output against any NHL club. When you pile up 31 points (19-12) in 22 games to confound the Canucks — a production split between the Predators and Tampa Bay Lightning — it grabs the attention.
If the Canucks expect to stretch their win streak to three games Wednesday — they won consecutive games for the first time since Dec. 1 with an impressive 5-2 effort in St. Louis on Monday — they can’t allow free-agent acquisition Stamkos to shoot from his sweet spot, or be sprung on an odd-man rush.
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The Predators are a dozen points shy of the final Western Conference wild-card spot and need to leap six clubs. They’re on a 7-3-0 spree, but in reality, they’re playing spoiler. Stamkos keeps striking with a team-high nine power-play goals, five game winners, and five goals in his last six games.
To combat that, the Canucks must keeping playing more to their complete game tonight, which was visible against the Blues.
“Our structure has been better and guys are holding to the details,” Canucks head coach Rick Tocchet said following the morning game-day skate. “And on the road, you want to make sure you do a really good forecheck because that can really help our game.
“It’s our play without the puck and attacking the interior. Five goals last game and continuing to funnel pucks to the net is something we’ve really preached. Even on rushes. Rather than staying on the boards, get the puck to the middle of the ice where good things happen.
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“And when you attack, you really have three or four options. You can hit the weak-side defence, funnel the puck to the net, shoot it yourself, or take it to the net. If you just defer to the point all the time, or stay on the boards, you’re limiting your options.”
Still, the Canucks must guard against what occurred in a 3-0 loss to the Predators on Jan.3 at Rogers Arena.
Stamkos scored early and two empty-netters sealed the deal in a game that should have been there for the taking — even with the Canucks missing Quinn Hughes and Elias Pettersson. They held a 27-19 shot advantage, but couldn’t solve standout goalie Juuse Saros.
All it took that night was a 3-on-2 rush, and a customary finish by Stamkos, to put the Canucks in a hole. They lost a pair of puck battles and Stamkos took a feed from Jonathan Marchessault and had the time and space to unload a cannon of a shot that got the better of Kevin Lankinen.
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Canucks goaltender Kevin Lankinen turns aside Predators centre Fedor Svechkov during Jan. 3 meeting at Rogers Arena. Nashville won 3-0.Photo by Rich Lam /Getty Images
“When you have their top line on the ice, you know, I’d like to see a couple guys reload on a 50-50 puck,” said Tocchet. “I honestly started saying to the coaches this should have been a 0-0 game going into overtime.
“There weren’t many (bad) moments in this game and Stamkos and his team didn’t make any of them theirs.”
It was just another cautionary tale.
On Nov. 17 at Rogers Arena, Stamkos struck for a pair of power-play goals to the high glove side on Lankinen in a 5-3 win. His 219 career man-advantage strikes vaulted him past Jaromir Jagr and Mike Gartner into 11th place overall.
The history: Third meeting of season. The Canucks swept the season series in 2023-24 and outscored the Predators 13-6. They opened with a 3-2 road win on Oct.24 and followed up with a 5-2 victory at home a week later in which Pettersson had a hat-trick. They then posted a 5-2 win in Nashville on Dec.19.
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The hope: Rookie defenceman Elias Pettersson continues to make impressive strides in his third NHL game, and the other Pettersson logs more than 14:24 on Monday — his average is 18:53 — to build off season-high seven shots and be a difference-maker. He has just one goal in his last night games and only 11 on the season.
The fear: Consistently inconsistent. A litmus test for the Canucks to display accountability in all three zones to get off to another fast start and dictate the tempo. They’re 11-4-6 when scoring first, 10-2-3 when leading after 20 minutes.
The top guns: We’re running out of Hughes superlatives. He had two assists Monday to reach 100 multi-point career games, the first franchise defenceman to hit that lofty plateau. The captain is also tied for the league lead in scoring by blueliners with 56 points (14-42).
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The wounded: Canucks: Kiefer Sherwood (undisclosed, day-to-day). Mark Jankowski (upper body, day-to-day), Jeremy Lauzon (lower body, IR), Luke Evangelista (lower body, IR).
The quote: “A big game, a four-pointer, and we’re both going for playoff spots. We started on time and the first period really set us up for the game. A nice win.” — Tocchet on 5-2 triumph Monday against Blues.
The lineup:
Heinen-Miller-Boeser
Hoglander-Pettersson-Karlsson
DeBrusk-Suter-Garland
Joshua-Blueger-DiGiuseppe
Hughes-Myers
Forbort-Hronek
Pettersson-Soucy
Lankinen
The prediction: The Canucks learn from past mistakes against Predators and play defensively-sound game. Rejuvenated power play strikes in 3-2 victory.
(FAN FORUM: Do you have a specific question for a player? Pass it along to @provincesports and we’ll get it in a future edition.)
The Vancouver Canucks are gearing up to face off against the Nashville Predators in an exciting game day match-up. All eyes will be on Steven Stamkos, the quick-strike forward who is sure to bring his A-game to the ice.
Stamkos, known for his lightning-fast speed and lethal scoring ability, will be a force to be reckoned with as he takes on the Predators defense. With his quick hands and incredible hockey IQ, Stamkos is always a threat to put the puck in the back of the net.
Canucks fans will be on the edge of their seats as they watch Stamkos and the rest of the team battle it out against the Predators. Will the Canucks be able to shut down Stamkos and secure the win, or will the Predators come out on top?
One thing is for certain – this game day match-up is not one to be missed. So grab your jerseys, grab your popcorn, and get ready for an action-packed game as the Canucks take on the Predators with Steven Stamkos in town. Let’s go Canucks! #Canucks #Predators #StevenStamkos #GameDay
The settlement that cleared the way for the construction of a temple in a Texas town by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints appears to be unraveling, according to statements by both sides.
Now, the future of the McKinney Texas Temple may be headed to the courts if the agreement the town and the church reached in mediation in November doesn’t hold, a local church spokeswoman said in a new statement released Monday.
Leaders in Fairview, Texas, denied the church’s original building application in August, after some residents complained the proposed temple was too large. The town and church forged a settlement in mediation after the church voluntarily agreed to reduce the size of the temple, dropping it from 44,000 square feet to 29,960 and from two stories to one. Church leaders also reduced the height of the proposed steeple from 173 feet.
“Despite imposing a substantial burden on the church’s exercise and practice of religion, the church offered to make significant compromises, including reducing both the size of the temple by 10,000 square feet and reducing the height of the steeple to 120 feet,” the spokeswoman for the temple, Melissa McNeely, said in a statement.
The mayor and town councilmembers unanimously agreed to approve the smaller temple, and the church began to prepare a new application.
Why is the settlement now in question?
But Fairview officials waffled publicly. Mayor Henry Lessner called the settlement an “initial compromise” in a letter announcing it to residents, then said at a Dec. 3 town meeting that negotiations were only in the first inning. Town officials also characterized the church as a bully during the meeting and asked residents to call church headquarters to ask for a still smaller temple, according to news reports.
A town representative did just that the following day. According to a letter from a church attorney, an attorney for the town called him and asked for the church to accept a temple significantly smaller than the one the sides agreed to in mediation. Mayor Lessner then was quoted in the December town newsletter as saying, “through our attorneys, we have told (the church) that there is a good chance that the new design with the 120-foot tower will not be accepted.”
On Dec. 20, the sides held a videoconference. According to the church attorney’s letter, Lessner told church representatives that while he and the mayor pro tem intended to vote for mediated settlement, they did not know how others would vote in wake of negative reaction from some residents.
What will the church do next?
Church officials planned to file their new application for the smaller temple on Jan. 13, but they became uncertain it would be accepted because of statements by the mayor and other town officials, according to the church attorney’s letter.
“In light of the foregoing circumstances, the church has no confidence that the town will make good on its commitments as set forth in the memorandum,” the church attorney stated. “The church is further concerned that proceeding as though the town will make good on its commitments will simply prejudice the church’s legal rights. Accordingly, the church will not submit an amended or new conditional use permit application today.”
Melissa McNeely, the temple spokeswoman, said the church had attempted to negotiate in good faith to find common ground while protecting the rights of religious freedom for local members of the church.
“The church understood these modifications fully satisfied any concerns previously raised by the town council,” she stated.
Attorneys representing the church asked Fairview officials to allow the church representatives to meet with each town councilmember individually. According to the church attorney, town officials said they would share the invitation with the councilmembers but did not expect all to agree.
“If town officials continue to be unwilling to discuss the status of the agreement made in mediation,” McNeely stated, “the next step is to ask a court to review local, state and federal laws regarding the town’s process of denying the church’s original proposal in August 2024 to build a temple in Fairview, Texas.”
Why the church believes it has the right to build the temple
Temples are sacred, holy places for Latter-day Saints, who consider them to be houses of the Lord. Church officials have said from the beginning that federal and state religious liberty laws and Fairview zoning laws give the church the right to build the temple at the size proposed in its original application.
“The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints seeks to be a good neighbor and has an extensive track record of successfully building temples that have been welcomed in more than 200 communities around the world, including seven in Texas,” McNeely said in her statement. “These places of worship are always well maintained, feature beautiful landscaping and symbolize faith and peace.”
The proposed location of the temple is on a four-lane highway directly across the street from businesses in a commercial zone in Allen, Texas.
The Fairview side of the road is known as “church row” because four churches in a row line the street. Church representatives and attorneys have repeatedly noted that houses of worship traditionally are located in residential zones in the same way schools are. Fairview’s zoning ordinances uphold that practice, church representatives say.
Legally, the church says the Texas Religious Freedom Restoration Act and the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, a federal law known as RLUIPA bar local governments from imposing unreasonable land-use requirements on people of faith building places of worship.
The U.S. Department of Justice sent an official letter to state, county and municipal officials across the nation in March 2024, reminding them that, among other things, “RLUIPA prohibits governments from imposing or implementing land use regulations that ‘unreasonably limit’ religious assemblies, institutions or structures within a jurisdiction.”
The letter noted that, “While zoning is primarily a local matter, where it conflicts with federal civil rights laws such as the Fair Housing Act or RLUIPA, federal law takes precedence.”
Fairview officials have maintained that their zoning ordinances give them latitude to enforce limits on the church.
New Georgia RLUIPA case
The Justice Department noted in the March 2024 letter that it had opened over 155 formal investigations and filed nearly 30 lawsuits related to RLUIPA’s land-use provisions.
It has continued to enforce those provisions. The department filed another lawsuit against a city on Dec. 16, when it alleged that the City of Brunswick, Georgia, violated RLUIPA by interfering with land owned by the United Methodist Church. The church runs The Well, a faith-based resource center for people experiencing homelessness on its land. The city has blamed the center for what the DOJ characterized as unrelated criminal activity in Brunswick, according to a DOJ news release.
“Federal law protects the right of religious groups such as The Well to use their land to help others,” said Kristen Clarke, an assistant attorney general in the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, in a statement. “The division will continue to vindicate the rights of groups to exercise their religion and fight local land-use laws that unlawfully restrict those rights.”
The DOJ has supported RLUIPA through both recent Republican and Democratic administrations.
The Justice Department announced its Place to Worship Initiative in June 2018. The initiative focused on RLUIPA’s provisions that protect the rights of houses of worship and other religious institutions to worship on their land.
In a recent announcement, the Church has expressed disappointment in the actions of a Texas town regarding a settlement reached for the McKinney Texas Temple. The town, whose name has not been disclosed, is allegedly not standing by the agreement that was previously made.
The Church had reportedly reached a settlement with the town regarding the construction and operation of the temple, which was set to be built in the area. However, it appears that the town is now reneging on the terms of the agreement, leaving the Church in a difficult position.
The Church has stated that it is committed to upholding its end of the bargain and is hopeful that the town will honor its commitments as well. The temple is an important project for the Church and its members, and it is crucial that all parties involved work together to ensure its successful completion.
It is unclear at this time what steps the Church will take in response to the town’s actions, but it is clear that this situation is a setback for the project. The Church is calling on the town to uphold its end of the agreement and work collaboratively with the Church to move the project forward.
Stay tuned for further updates as this situation develops.
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Russia on Sunday claimed its troops had captured a strategically important town in eastern Ukraine as part of a grinding campaign to weaken Kyiv’s grip on the country’s industrial heartland, while uncertainty over the continued flow of U.S. funding has reportedly halted the work of some Ukrainian NGOs, including those helping war veterans.
Russia’s Defense Ministry announced the fall of Velyka Novosilka, which had around 5,000 residents before the war, following a monthslong battle. Its statement could not be independently verified, and Ukraine claimed its troops had only strategically withdrawn from certain areas.
But if confirmed, it would make Velyka Novosilka the first significant town to capitulate in 2025 under Moscow’s onslaught in the eastern Donetsk region against Ukraine’s weary and short-handed army. The war is set to reach its three-year milestone in February.
Ukrainian forces withdrew from certain parts of Velyka Novosilka to avoid encirclement, the 110th Separate Mechanized Brigade said in a statement on its official Telegram channel Sunday. The brigade is active in that patch of the frontline.
Analysts have long predicted that it’s only a matter of time until Russian forces capture the settlement, which lies only 15 kilometers (9 miles) from the neighboring Dnipropetrovsk region.
The brigade said though they have approximate parity with Russian forces in terms of artillery and drones, the Russians have a huge advantage in manpower.
“Our units, using the weather conditions, skillfully withdrew from areas where there was a threat of encirclement. This does not mean that we have completely left the city, the fighting in Velyka Novosilka continues . All actions are aimed at minimizing our own losses and maximum damage to the enemy,” the statement said.
The brigade said the withdrawal will make it topographically difficult for Russians to advance by making the river an obstacle for further advance.
“The enemy (…) will have no peace, any movement is cut off by shells and drones,” the statement said.
Elsewhere, Ukrainian NGOs catering to the needs of war veterans and their families have claimed a suspension of U.S. funding is forcing them to halt their work, days after newly sworn in U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced he would pause foreign aid grants for 90 days.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy later claimed that military aid to Ukraine would continue, but did not clarify whether humanitarian aid had been paused. Kyiv relies on the U.S. for 40% of its military needs.
According to news reports, Ukrainian NGOs receiving funding from Washington this weekend began receiving “stop work” orders, requiring them to pause all projects and related travel.
Veteran Hub, an NGO that provides legal and psychological support to war veterans and their families, was forced to halt operations of two of its three largest service units as a result, the organization said in its official Facebook page.
It said the suspension has lead it to ask for public donations for the first time.
“Since 2018, we have refrained from public fundraising because we believe that donations are primarily needed for the military. Today, we are forced to publicly ask for support for the first time,” the organization said.
With the Trump administration questioning the future of U.S. aid to Ukraine, stressing the need to quickly broker a peace deal, both Moscow and Kyiv are seeking battlefield successes to strengthen their negotiating positions ahead of any prospective talks.
For the past year, Russian forces have been waging an intense campaign to punch holes in Ukraine’s defenses in the eastern Donetsk region. The sustained and costly offensive has compelled Kyiv to give up a series of towns, villages and hamlets.
In a recent development, Russia has announced that its troops have successfully captured a strategic town in eastern Ukraine. This move is a significant escalation in the ongoing conflict between the two countries and has raised concerns about the potential for further violence and instability in the region.
The town, which has not been named by Russian officials, is said to be of great strategic importance due to its location and resources. The capture of this town is likely to give Russian forces a significant advantage in their military operations in eastern Ukraine.
The Ukrainian government has condemned Russia’s actions and has called for international support to help defend its sovereignty and territorial integrity. The United States and other Western countries have also expressed their concerns and have called for Russia to withdraw its troops from Ukrainian territory.
The situation in eastern Ukraine remains fluid and unpredictable, and there is a growing fear that the conflict could escalate into a full-scale war. The international community must act swiftly to de-escalate the situation and prevent further bloodshed in the region.
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Russia, troops, captured, strategic town, eastern Ukraine, military operation, conflict, international relations, Donetsk, Luhansk, ceasefire, territorial gains
PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — Rose Byrne plays a mother in the midst of a breakdown in the experiential psychological thriller “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You.”
Anticipation was high for the A24 film, which will be released sometime this year. Its premiere Friday at the Sundance Film Festival was easily the hottest ticket in town, with even ticketholders unable to get in. Those who did make it into the Library theater were treated to an intense, visceral, inventive story from filmmaker Mary Bronstein that has quickly become one of the festival’s must-sees.
Byrne plays Linda, who is barely hanging on while managing her daughter’s mysterious illness. She’s faced with crisis after crisis, big and small — from the massive, gaping hole in their apartment ceiling that forces them to move to a dingy motel, to an escalating showdown with a parking attendant at a care center. The cracks in her psychological, emotional and physical wellbeing are become too much to bear.
“I’d never seen a movie before where a mother is going through a crisis with a child but our energy is not with the child’s struggle, it’s with the mother’s,” Bronstein said at the premiere. “If you’re a caretaker, you shouldn’t be bothering with yourself at all. It should all be about the person you’re taking care of, right? And that is a particular kind of emotional burnout state that I was really interested in exploring.”
Byrne and Bronstein went deep in the preparation phase, having long discussions about Linda with the goal of making her as real as possible before the quick, 27-day shoot. Byrne said she was obsessed with figuring out who Linda was before the crisis. The film was in part inspired by Bronstein’s experience with her own daughter, but she didn’t want to elaborate on the specifics.
“That’s her story to tell,” Bronstein said.
Part of Linda’s story involves her therapist, played by Conan O’Brien, who joked that he didn’t realize he was in a movie.
“I’m not looking out for movie scripts or anything. But when I got a call from A24 that they wanted me to read something, I’m not stupid,” O’Brien said. “I showed it to my wife, who is one of the smartest people I know, and she read through it and she said, ‘I didn’t know they made movies like this anymore.’”
He was particularly in awe of his director and co-star, saying he felt like a fraud standing beside them.
“It was an amazing experience, one of the best experiences of my life, just to be with them and watch them work,” O’Brien said. “I don’t know how (Byrne) did that and not check into a hospital afterwards, because I haven’t seen any actor, man or woman, sustain that level for an entire movie.”
“I feel like I have to go to a hospital now, because this was the first time I watched it,” he added. “I’m a mess.”
A$AP Rocky also co-stars, as a man Linda meets at the motel, but was not in Park City for the premiere. He is currently on trial, charged with firing a gun at a former friend.
The film is full of ambiguity, metaphor and just plain artistic expression that Bronstein hesitated to explain, from the name itself to the hole in the ceiling, which takes on a somewhat supernatural quality.
“When we have nothing left to give, we have an emptiness inside of us,” Bronstein said. “And that emptiness is actually not empty: It’s filled with all the darkness and self-hate and doubt and fear and dread and regret and everything. … That to me is what the hole is.”
Some of it, she said, she doesn’t even fully understand. The point is the experience, and critics and Sundance audiences are already fully on board.
Bronstein, a bit of a cult figure in the film world, made her directorial debut in 2008 at the SXSW festival with “Yeast,” which featured a pre-fame Greta Gerwig and was hailed by by New Yorker critic Richard Brody as a “mumblecore classic.”
“If I Had Legs I’d Kick You” is only her second feature.
“This is the first time that anybody else has paid for me to make art,” Bronstein said. “I’m proud to say that this is the film that came directly from my head to the screen.”
At Sundance, the hottest ticket in town was a Rose Byrne and Conan O’Brien psychological thriller
The Sundance Film Festival is known for showcasing groundbreaking and innovative films, and this year was no exception. Among the most buzzed-about films at the festival was a psychological thriller starring the talented duo of Rose Byrne and Conan O’Brien.
The film, which has been shrouded in secrecy, is said to be a gripping and intense exploration of the human psyche. Byrne and O’Brien deliver standout performances, with Byrne playing a troubled woman grappling with her inner demons and O’Brien portraying a mysterious figure who may hold the key to her salvation.
Audiences at Sundance were raving about the film, praising its tense atmosphere, sharp writing, and chilling performances. Many are already predicting that it could be a major contender come awards season.
With its combination of star power, psychological depth, and thrilling suspense, this Rose Byrne and Conan O’Brien collaboration is sure to be one of the most talked-about films of the year. Keep an eye out for more news and updates on this exciting project.
Tags:
Sundance film festival, Rose Byrne, Conan O’Brien, psychological thriller, hottest ticket, movie premiere, film industry, celebrity news, entertainment, indie film, Sundance buzz, film festival premiere, film critics, movie reviews
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Cynthia Robertson could be forgiven for feeling that the banner was aimed at her. Its white-on-black lettering — “FUCK BIDEN AND FUCK YOU FOR VOTING FOR HIM” — hung from the wooden house right across the street from her own.
Hostility toward the outgoing Democratic president is no surprise in Sulphur, Louisiana, a red town in a red state in a country that has handed the White House and Congress to Republicans. Yet the message felt like a poke in the eye at a time when Robertson was seeking funding through Biden’s signature climate law so her nonprofit organization could repair and retrofit hurricane-battered houses in the area — including her neighbor’s. Not even a fraying tarp, a tar patch or the piece of corrugated metal tacked on the roof could keep the rain from pouring inside.
Donald Trump has vowed to overturn the law that would provide the funding, the Inflation Reduction Act, which he has referred to as the “new green scam.”
If he follows through once he assumes office, Trump would be rolling back a law that has disproportionately benefited red areas like Sulphur that make up his base.
Though not a single Republican legislator voted for the law, an outsized portion of its historic $1 trillion in climate and energy provisions has benefited red congressional districts and states that voted for Trump, according to a report by E2, a group tracking the effects of the law. Red districts had the biggest growth in green jobs, the report said. Red states, including Nevada, Wyoming, Kentucky and Georgia, have seen the biggest jumps in clean energy investments, according to an August report from the Clean Investment Monitor, which tracks public and private investments in climate technology. Texas has received $69 billion in clean investments since the law passed, second only to California.
Not all of the money has been spent yet. And several provisions are vulnerable to rollbacks, among them tax credits for home energy improvements and certain alternative fueling sites. Billions hang in the balance, including, to Robertson’s chagrin, more than $100 million for disadvantaged communities, like Sulphur, to combat pollution and better weather the effects of climate change.
An ordained elder in the Presbyterian Church, Robertson, 66, wears her wavy white hair short, cusses freely and greets by name the homeless of Sulphur, a city of some 20,000 people. Miss Cindy, as she’s known in her neighborhood, named her nonprofit organization, Micah 6:8 Mission, after an old testament verse about caring for the poor.
Cynthia Robertson and her neighbor, Nate, at home with her goats in Portie Town. Robertson is seeking funding through President Joe Biden’s signature climate law so her nonprofit organization can repair and retrofit hurricane-battered houses in the area.
Last summer, she and other community leaders worked around the clock to submit the grant proposal seven weeks in advance of a fall deadline. Among her partners is Build Change, which specializes in creating housing that can withstand natural disasters in the developing world. The organizations have sought more than $19 million for their local improvement plan, which includes shoring up roofs, remediating mold and mildew, providing homes with solar-powered air conditioning and building a community center where residents can find refuge during emergencies.
But in mid-December, an email from the Environmental Protection Agency explained it didn’t have enough time to make a decision on her application before the inauguration.
It will be up to the Trump EPA to determine whether Sulphur and some 2,000 other communities get the grants they applied for.
Now, Robertson said, all she can do is pray that Republicans will see that the investment is in everyone’s best interest, including their own.
As her small staff gathered for a weekly meeting in December, she bowed her head. “Dear Lord,” she said, “if it’s your will, may we get this damn grant, please.”
Average life expectancy in Portie Town is 69, nine years short of the national average.
A Storm-Battered Community
Sulphur is near the beating heart of the extremely profitable petrochemical industry. Huge multinational corporations — including Westlake Chemicals, Citgo Petroleum, LyondellBasell and Phillips 66 — have plants just a few miles from Robertson’s home and the office of her environmental nonprofit. But Portie Town, the crisscross of streets lined with low-slung homes on the north side of Sulphur where she lives, seems to have gained little for its proximity to these engines of wealth.
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Named for a widow who moved to the area with her eight children in the early 1900s, Portie Town (pronounced Por-shay) remains a place of struggle. Median annual income is around $40,000 and life expectancy is 69, nine years short of the national average. Climate change has added another layer of challenge. The hurricane risk in Calcasieu, the parish where it is located, is in the top 3% in the country, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which rates the expected annual loss from storms in the area as high and the resiliency as low.
With its shore on the Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana has always been vulnerable to storms, but the threat has unquestionably worsened in recent years. Climate change has raised temperatures, causing the air and water to warm. Storms intensify as they travel across the warmed oceans, pulling in more water vapor and heat, which makes hurricanes stronger and more intense.
When Hurricane Laura hit in August 2020 — its eye passing directly over Sulphur — it was the strongest hurricane to make landfall in the state’s history, killing at least 30 people and knocking out the power in Portie Town for weeks. Many residents couldn’t afford generators or the fuel to run them and went without air conditioners and refrigerators even as the temperature soared above 90 degrees. Shortly after the power was restored, it was knocked out again by Hurricane Delta, which was followed by a deep freeze caused by Winter Storm Uri. The next year, Hurricane Ida tied Laura’s record for the strongest winds measured in Louisiana.
“The storms have been getting closer and closer together, more and more active,” said Jessica McGee, who lives with her adult son in a small, cream-colored house a few blocks from Robertson in Portie Town. The McGees haven’t had gas since Hurricane Laura; they have used electric space heaters and cooked their meals in a microwave oven for the past three years. Boards nailed over their windows before the 2020 storm remain there.
Jessica McGee hasn’t been able to repair damage to her home from Hurricane Laura in 2020.
McGee, who lives on disability benefits, said she has neither the strength nor the money to repair the hurricane damage. “It’s my water, it’s the pipes, it’s the floor…,” she said. “The next one, our roof is going to be gone.”
If Robertson’s nonprofit is awarded the grant it is seeking, McGee’s house may also benefit. She brightens at the thought that government funding could bring her home back from the brink of inhabitability, but remains skeptical of politics.
“I don’t vote,” McGee said, shrugging. “It’s not for me.”
A Political Lightning Rod
The sprawling Inflation Reduction Act had many goals, including funding the Internal Revenue Service and lowering health care costs, but its main aim was to reduce emissions of the greenhouse gases that drive climate change through tax credits, customer incentives and grants. Despite its purpose, its authors conspicuously omitted the word “climate” from its name in an effort to get bipartisan support for it.
The benefits of the law were felt widely, spurring clean energy projects in almost 40% of the country’s congressional districts; 19 of the 20 that got the most funding were led by Republicans.
In August, as he was standing on a corn and bean farm next to the deputy administrator of the Biden EPA, Jim Pillen enthused about his state’s grant. Pillen, the Republican governor of Nebraska, called the agency’s $307 million IRA grant “a once-in-a-lifetime, extraordinary opportunity.” In Pocatello, Idaho — a town in a red county that is still recovering from the 2012 Charlotte Fire — “folks are pretty excited” about the planned greenway path that will decrease wildfire risks and allow residents to bike by the river, Hannah Sanger, the city’s science and environment administrator, told me. And in Alaska, where Trump also won handily, the recipients of a grant of more than $47 million to electrify two ports described themselves as “ecstatic” about the money.
Still the law remains a political lightning rod. Republicans in Congress have tried to repeal parts of it dozens of times, and Trump railed against it on the campaign trail. “My plan will terminate the Green New Deal,” Trump told a group assembled at the Economic Club of New York in September. “It actually sets us back, as opposed to moves us forward. And [I will] rescind all unspent funds under the misnamed Inflation Reduction Act.”
Robertson passes the Westlake Chemical plant in Sulphur.
Clay Higgins, the Republican who represents Sulphur in Congress, voted against the IRA, which he attacked as a “monstrosity of a bill” that “wastes hundreds of billions of dollars on Green New Deal subsidies.” Higgins, who receives campaign funds from the oil and gas industry, notes on his website that “fossil fuels are the lifeblood of our modern society.” He did not respond to questions about Robertson’s hope to use IRA money to shore up the houses in his district.
In November, Republicans on the House Energy and Commerce Committee issued a report that attacked the EPA’s IRA grants as a “green group giveaway” and characterized some of the recipients as “extremist organizations.” The lawmakers criticized funding groups that educate the public about climate change, or “environmental activist organizations that work to influence public and elected officials to adopt their often-extreme views, such as completely eliminating the use of fossil fuels.”
Despite the fiery rhetoric, a full repeal of the law seems unlikely, in part because it would require a majority of the House and Senate to agree on it. In August, 18 House Republicans wrote to Speaker Mike Johnson urging him to preserve the IRA’s energy tax credits, which are already funding projects. And it will be extremely difficult for the new administration to claw back grant money that has already been awarded.
Even if he fails to get the congressional support necessary to repeal the law, Trump could reverse the executive order that grants the authority to implement it. He could also cut short its longer term provisions, some of which were supposed to extend through 2029 and beyond. He can interfere with the funding that now flows through more than 12 federal agencies. And he can put a halt to the two dozen proposed rules that would carry out the law’s goals, according to the Brookings Institution. Congress could also severely undermine the law by targeting the rules that have been issued since Aug. 1 — and can thus be overturned through the Congressional Review Act.
A Looming Decision
Soon after the IRA was signed into law in 2022, Robertson began looking for ways it could benefit Portie Town.
Robertson at home before heading to church. Her charity and several other organizations together received $407,000 in Inflation Reduction Act funds in 2023.
Her charity had already been distributing food, clothing and “hurricane buckets” filled with mosquito repellant, canned ham, batteries and other supplies to locals when it and several other organizations together received $407,000 in IRA funds in 2023. The grant pays for the groups to distribute “evidence-based materials” about pollution, climate change and public health, according to its application. It also paid for two air monitors, which regularly document dangerously elevated levels of particulate matter in the air, pollution that is associated with premature death and breathing problems.
The IRA’s Community Change Grants, designed to provide approximately $2 billion for climate-related projects in disadvantaged communities, offered more direct help.
Robertson despaired on the December day when she learned that the Trump administration, not Biden’s, would be deciding whether Portie Town will get the grant.
“This community needs this so badly,” she said through tears. “Damn it.”
Just that morning, she had visited with Janet Broussard, 82, who lives by herself a few blocks away. The two had stood outside Broussard’s trailer imagining how the grant might improve it. Broussard’s roof had come off more than four years ago during Hurricane Delta. It was replaced, but, within two years, the new one was damaged by a tornado. She had no insurance that would pay to repair the damage and catches the rain in a bucket that she empties after storms.
Broussard has not been able to repair the roof of her trailer that was damaged during a tornado.
But Robertson said that if the grant came through, Micah 6:8 Mission would be able to help fix the roof. “We’ll also be able to take the siding off, insulate, put new siding on, take the windows out, put in double-paned insulating windows,” Robertson had said.
Zealan Hoover, a senior adviser to the EPA administrator who oversaw the IRA grant programs, said the agency made a herculean effort and managed to distribute more than 95% of the money. But agency officials didn’t have time to give the proposals that were submitted in the final weeks of the application period the careful reads they deserved, he said, and so they decided to reserve some funds so the next administration can finish the process. “We are going to give those 2,000 applicants who came in at the very end, you know, some hope and chance of being selected,” said Hoover, who pointed out that, under any administration, “the agency’s mission is to protect human health and the environment.”
What it decides will matter to Tony Rodriguez, who hung the “FUCK BIDEN” banner outside his home in the fall. A slight man with a graying beard who goes by Burnout, Rodriguez said he hung the banner to raise awareness about “all the bad stuff” Biden did. He had heard on the news — he can’t remember the exact source — that the president was to blame for children being sex trafficked, repeating a false conspiracy theory, and had sold out our country.
Tony Rodriguez said he hung this banner outside his home to raise awareness about “all the bad stuff” Biden did.
Credit:
Courtesy of Cynthia Robertson
Still, he said he would be grateful if Miss Cindy would use some of the money she is hoping to get from the law championed by the outgoing president to stop the rain from coming into his bedroom.
“At least then he’d have done something good,” he said.
Correction
Jan. 22, 2025: This story originally misidentified the owner of an industrial plant near Sulphur, Louisiana. That plant is owned by Phillips 66, which was spun off from ConocoPhillips; it is not owned by ConocoPhillips.
In the wake of the devastating hurricane that has left our town in ruins, the fate of our community now lies in the hands of President Trump. As we struggle to rebuild and recover from the destruction, we are at a critical juncture where decisions made at the federal level will have a profound impact on our future.
The residents of this town are counting on President Trump to provide the necessary resources and support to help us rebuild our homes, businesses, and lives. We need swift and effective action to ensure that our community can recover and thrive once again.
While the road ahead may be long and difficult, we remain hopeful that with the help of our government and leaders, we can overcome this tragedy and emerge stronger than ever. President Trump, the fate of this hurricane-battered town is now in your hands. We urge you to act swiftly and decisively to help us rebuild and recover.
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Hurricane-battered town, Trump, ProPublica, disaster relief, government response, natural disaster, rebuilding efforts, political decisions, community recovery, environmental impact
Trent Alexander-Arnold, Ibrahima Konate and Andy Robertson are restored to the Reds back line for the Premier League fixture.
Meanwhile, Cody Gakpo and Alexis Mac Allister also come back in to Arne Slot’s selection.
The injured Curtis Jones, as well as Conor Bradley, Darwin Nunez, Kostas Tsimikas and Jarell Quansah are the players who make way from the midweek win over Lille in the Champions League.
Liverpool: Alisson, Van Dijk, Konate, Diaz, Szoboszlai, Mac Allister, Salah, Gakpo, Robertson, Gravenberch, Alexander-Arnold.
Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp has confirmed his starting line-up for the upcoming match against Ipswich Town. The team will be as follows:
Starting XI:
1. Alisson
2. Alexander-Arnold
3. Matip
4. Van Dijk
5. Robertson
6. Fabinho
7. Henderson
8. Keita
9. Salah
10. Firmino
11. Mane
Substitutes:
12. Adrian
13. Milner
14. Wijnaldum
15. Oxlade-Chamberlain
16. Minamino
17. Origi
18. Jones
It’s a strong line-up from Klopp, with key players such as Salah, Mane, and Van Dijk all starting the match. Liverpool will be looking to secure a victory against Ipswich Town and continue their winning streak in the league. Let’s hope for a great performance from the Reds! #LiverpoolFC #IpswichTown #PremierLeague
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Liverpool line-up, Ipswich Town, confirmed, starting XI, matchday, football, soccer, team news, lineup announcement, Premier League, EFL Cup, sports, Liverpool FC, Ipswich Town FC.
Liverpool have won their last three league games against Ipswich by an aggregate score of 13-0 – they last won four in a row against the Tractor Boys between 1963 and 1969.
Ipswich have won two of their last three away league games against Liverpool, having failed to win any of their first 27 visits to Anfield beforehand (D8 L19). Their last visit ended in a 5-0 defeat on the final day of the 2001-02 season, however.
Liverpool have won their last 10 Premier League home games against promoted sides by an aggregate score of 34-7 since a 1-0 loss to Fulham in March 2021.
Liverpool remain unbeaten in their last 17 Premier League games (W12 D5), with their only defeat this season coming back in September (0-1 v Nottingham Forest). In Arne Slot’s case, it’s the longest unbeaten run any Liverpool manager has had in their first Football League season with the club since William Edward Barclay, who avoided defeat in all 28 games in the Reds’ first ever such campaign in 1893-94 (second tier).
Liverpool have a higher xG total than any other side in the Premier League this season (50.2), while only Southampton (52.6) have a higher xG against than Ipswich (45.8).
Only Crystal Palace (59%) have earned a higher proportion of their Premier League points this season in away games than Ipswich Town (56% – 9/16), who have earned two of their three league wins this term on the road (vs Tottenham in November & Wolves in December).
Liverpool have conceded the first goal in each of their last three Premier League home games, last having a longer such run between January and April 2021 (7).
Five of Cody Gakpo’s six Premier League goals for Liverpool have come in home games, with the forward netting in each of his last four such appearances at Anfield. Only two Dutchmen have scored in five in a row at home in the Premier League – Ruud van Nistelrooy (August 2003) and Robin van Persie twice (March 2012 and January 2013).
Only Dominic Solanke (853) has applied more pressures than Ipswich’s Omari Hutchinson in the Premier League this season (716). Meanwhile, only Solanke again (399) and Erling Haaland (297) have applied more pressures in the final third (399) than Ipswich forward Liam Delap (295).
Ipswich’s Leif Davis is the only player to have created 20+ chances from both open play (21) and set play (20) in the Premier League this season. Meanwhile, among defenders, only Liverpool’s Trent Alexander-Arnold (42) has created more chances overall in the competition this term than Davis (41).
Liverpool will face off against Ipswich Town in a highly anticipated Premier League match this weekend. Both teams will be looking to secure three points and continue their push up the table.
Team news:
Liverpool will be without key players Virgil van Dijk and Joe Gomez, who are both sidelined with long-term injuries. Thiago Alcantara is also a doubt for the match with a muscle injury. However, Mohamed Salah and Sadio Mane are expected to lead the attack for the Reds.
Ipswich Town will have a full squad to choose from, with manager Paul Cook likely to field his strongest lineup for this crucial fixture. The likes of James Norwood and Kayden Jackson will be key players to watch for Ipswich.
Stats:
Liverpool have won four out of their last five matches in all competitions, showing strong form despite their injury woes. They currently sit in 4th place in the Premier League table.
Ipswich Town, on the other hand, have struggled in recent matches, winning just two out of their last five games. They are currently in 17th place in the Championship table.
Head-to-head:
Liverpool and Ipswich Town have faced each other 31 times in competitive matches, with Liverpool winning 17 of those encounters. Ipswich have won 8 matches, with 6 draws between the two teams.
Liverpool will be looking to continue their dominance over Ipswich Town in this weekend’s match, but Ipswich will be determined to cause an upset and secure a valuable three points.
Overall, this promises to be an exciting and closely contested match between two talented teams. Make sure to tune in and catch all the action as Liverpool take on Ipswich Town in the Premier League.
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Liverpool vs Ipswich Town, Premier League preview, Liverpool team news, Ipswich Town team news, Premier League stats, head-to-head record Liverpool vs Ipswich Town, Liverpool vs Ipswich Town match analysis, Liverpool vs Ipswich Town key players, Liverpool vs Ipswich Town predicted lineup.
Price: $19.65 – $10.37 (as of Jan 23,2025 01:05:44 UTC – Details)
Aspect Ratio : 1.33:1 Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No MPAA rating : NR (Not Rated) Product Dimensions : 7.5 x 5.5 x 0.5 inches; 2.88 ounces Director : Gene Kelly, Stanley Donen Media Format : Multiple Formats, Closed-captioned, Dubbed, Color, NTSC, Subtitled Run time : 1 hour and 38 minutes Release date : May 2, 2000 Actors : Gene Kelly, Frank Sinatra, Betty Garrett, Ann Miller, Jules Munshin Dubbed: : French Subtitles: : English, French Language : English (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono) Studio : Warner Home Video ASIN : B00004RF9J Writers : Adolph Green, Betty Comden, Jerome Robbins Number of discs : 1
“On the Town: Exploring the Best of the City”
Join us as we take you on a journey through the vibrant streets, lively nightlife, and hidden gems of our city. From trendy restaurants and hip bars to historic landmarks and cultural attractions, there’s something for everyone to enjoy.
Discover the bustling cityscape by day, with its bustling markets, stunning architecture, and peaceful parks. Then, as the sun sets, immerse yourself in the electrifying nightlife scene, with live music, rooftop bars, and late-night eateries to keep you entertained until the early hours.
Whether you’re a local looking to rediscover your city or a visitor eager to explore its charms, come along with us as we uncover the best that our town has to offer. Stay tuned for insider tips, must-see attractions, and unforgettable experiences that will make your time in the city truly memorable. Let’s hit the town and make some unforgettable memories together! #OnTheTown #CityExploration #NightlifeAdventures
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Foot traffic has dropped significantly in Chicago’s predominantly Latino community, Little Village, also known as the “Mexico of the Midwest,” according to a Fox 32 Chicago report, as fears of deportation have heightened since President Donald Trump took office Monday.
“They have seen way less foot traffic, way less customers than they usually see,” Jennifer Aguilar, executive director of the Little Village Chamber of Commerce, said about the district to Fox 32. “Weekends are huge here in Little Village, and the amount of people that were out this weekend was significantly lower than usual.”
Considered Chicago’s second-busiest retail corridor, Little Village spans two miles long and is lined with nearly 500 businesses, including stores, restaurants and nightlife venues in the southwestern part of the city.
Establishments in Chicago’s Latino district Little Village have begun seeing less business after Trump pledged to crack down on illegal immigration.(Fox 32 Chicago)
According to Michael Rodriguez, an alderman for the 22nd ward, which includes Little Village, the once-bustling community isn’t empty due to just the cold weather. Rodriquez said to the local station that people are in fear of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) conducting large raids in the Mexican-American neighborhood.
“There’s definitely a lot of fear out there, and we think it has to do with some of this less activity in their neighborhood,” Rodriguez said. “The fear is palpable. The fear is vocalized by our residents. People in the streets are saying that they’re scared that ICE agents will show up at their doorsteps, at their workplaces, at their places of worship or places of going to school. They’re scared of that. That is a problem.”
While ICE raids are possible under Trump’s new crackdown on illegal immigration, there have been no signs of deportation yet, according to Leo Pargo, a community activist who’s been patrolling the neighborhoods for signs of ICE activity.
“We’ve been patrolling,” Pargo said to Fox 32. “We’ve been driving around Little Village, and through Pilsen, looking for any ICE agents or any potential raids that would be happening. So far, nothing.”
A sign that reads “Don’t open for ICE” is displayed on a window of a corner store in Little Village, Chicago, on the day Trump took office Monday.(Erin Hooley)
According to the report, as workers and shoppers stay at home, Aguilar said the looming fears will economically impact the district that reportedly rakes in $900 million in annual revenue.
“It makes it really difficult to stay afloat,” Aguilar said. “Especially right now when it’s just the beginning. It puts them in a state of worry, like what is it going to look like for the next four years?”
“It hurts really anyone who lives here in Chicago who receives services from the city,” Aguilar continued.
A street vendor sees no customers as consumers stop shopping in Chicago’s Little Village.(Fox 32 Chicago)
As a sanctuary city for migrants,Chicago is facing Trump head-on after the president pledged to tackle illegal immigration during his inaugural address Monday: “All illegal entry will immediately be halted, and we will begin the process of returning millions and millions of criminal aliens back to the places from which they came.”
On Tuesday, Trump’s designated border czar Tom Homan also said that ICE agents have already been deployed across the country to conduct operations.
Chicago’s Little Village is a predominantly Latino community full of Mexican-American establishments.(Eric Cox/Dan Fastenberg/Alexandra Sarabia/Core News)
Despite the crackdown, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson vowed to oppose the president’s plans and assured that the city’s local law enforcement will not participate with federal immigration enforcement under the 2017 Illinois Trust Act.
“Chicago stands strong: regardless of the circumstances, our commitment to protecting and supporting this city remains unwavering,” Johnson wrote in a social media post on Sunday. “We will continue to fight for the justice and safety of all who call this place home.”
Bonny Chu is a Digital Production Assistant at Fox News Digital.
In recent weeks, the bustling streets of Chicago’s vibrant Mexican-American community, Little Village, have fallen eerily quiet. Once known for its bustling shops, lively restaurants, and bustling marketplaces, the neighborhood now resembles a ghost town.
The drastic shift in atmosphere can be attributed to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, which has forced many businesses to close their doors and residents to stay indoors. With a significant portion of Little Village’s economy relying on small, local businesses, the community has been hit hard by the economic downturn caused by the pandemic.
The usually lively streets, filled with the sounds of mariachi music and the smell of delicious Mexican cuisine, now stand empty and silent. The once vibrant community, known for its strong cultural identity and close-knit ties, now struggles to stay afloat in the face of unprecedented challenges.
Despite the hardships faced by the community, there is hope on the horizon. Residents and business owners are coming together to support one another and find ways to adapt to the new reality. By supporting local businesses, staying connected with neighbors, and following safety guidelines, the community of Little Village is determined to weather this storm and emerge stronger than ever.
As we navigate these uncertain times, let us not forget the resilience and strength of Chicago’s Mexican-American community in Little Village. Though the streets may be empty now, the spirit of this vibrant neighborhood will never be extinguished.
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