Blue Jays starter Max Scherzer hopes performance against the A's is just the beginningNew Foto - Blue Jays starter Max Scherzer hopes performance against the A's is just the beginning

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Max Scherzer, for one night at least, offered a throwback performance. He stifled Athletics hitters for five innings on Friday night before finally running into some trouble in the sixth, but even then he limited the damage before exiting in a7-6 Toronto victory. Scherzer (1-0) finished with eight strikeouts while allowing five hits. "He was dominating areas up and down and out," Blue Jays manager John Schneider said. "He is who he is for a reason." Scherzer claimed his first victory since July 25 last year when he pitched for Texas and the Rangers defeated the Chicago White Sox 2-1. Injuries didn't help. The three-time Cy Young Award winner opened last season on the injured list after undergoing back surgery. Then shortly after recording that victory against the White Sox, he spent more than a month on the IL because of shoulder fatigue. Scherzersigned a $15.5 million, one-year contractwith the Blue Jays in the offseason, but again experienced health issues. He went on this 60-day ILbecause of an injured thumb. "My body's good," Scherzer said. "As long as my thumb is healthy, I can be myself. I can pitch like this. It's all about my thumb." This was his fourth start since rejoining the rotation, and Scherzer made the most of it. He struck out five consecutive batters at one point and shut out the A's over five innings, allowing just singles to Nick Kurtz and Tyler Soderstrom. The A's began to get to Scherzer in the sixth, with Kurtz hitting a two-run home run and Soderstrom getting a solo shot. Those homers cut the Blue Jays' lead to 7-3, but Scherzer induced a flyout to Miguel Andujar to end the threat. "It's my first time at 90 pitches, lengthening my arm out for the first time to the sixth inning this year," Scherzer said. "Get acclimated to that pitch count and hopefully get rolling. I'm happy about this, especially when we win. When I get my chance after the (All-Star) break, keep this going." Schneider said he thought the break came at a good time for the 40-year-old Scherzer. "Hopefully, he can build off of this and get him out there pretty regularly," Schneider said. "I think reshuffling the rotation if we can to give him a little more rest would be great. I'll take him on the mound any day of the week." __ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Blue Jays starter Max Scherzer hopes performance against the A's is just the beginning

Blue Jays starter Max Scherzer hopes performance against the A's is just the beginning WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Max Scherzer, for ...
From sleeping on a golf course to turning pro: How Issa Nlareb rediscovered his love of the game after illnessNew Foto - From sleeping on a golf course to turning pro: How Issa Nlareb rediscovered his love of the game after illness

Watching Issa Nlareb's swing, you'd never know he didn't take a golf lesson until five years after turning professional. For 13 years, observing others and reading two-time major champion Greg Norman's book were the closest things the Cameroonian had to formal instruction. Nlareb was just 11 years old when his mom died. Living on the streets near a golf course, he began collecting balls to earn money to survive, eventually picking up the game himself and becoming a caddie. However, his life dramatically changed in 2018 when he contracted bacterial meningitis while at a tournament in Egypt. The golfer developed sepsis, fell into a coma and required the amputation of both legs and most of his fingers. He wasn't sure he'd ever play the sport again. Life has thrown a lot of challenges Nlareb's way in his 34 years, yet while speaking toCNN Sports, he's as laid-back and confident as ever, believing he can be one of the topdisabled golfersin the world. Nlareb lived with his dad and stepmom in a house near Yaoundé Golf Club in Cameroon's capital after his mother's death, leaving school and taking care of four step-siblings before running away from home a year later. Eleven years old, "pissed off" at the situation and living on the streets, most nights he was picked up by the police and brought in to sleep in the station. One evening, though, he ran. "I hid myself in the golf course. When I stand up in the morning in the golf course, I was looking around me and I found a golf ball. And I took two golf balls, I went out, and I see the golf course. When I see the golf course, I was like, 'Wow,'" Nlareb said. Impressed by the scale and grandeur of the course and thinking the balls belonged to the players on the hole, he washed and offered them to the men. They gave him a dollar in return. "That was my first contact with golf," Nlareb said. With no school, he spent a lot of his time watching the players at Yaoundé Golf Club , thinking about how the players could improve their shots. He visualized this all without owning a club or having played a round. There was one man – who Nlareb recalls as "Mr. Davou" – who attempted the same shot day after day on the 13th hole. "There's out of bounds to the right, water in front of the green and behind the green. So, the guy was trying to go over the water every time and he lost some balls," Nlareb said, smiling at the memory. "I was laughing, and he say, 'Stop laughing. What can you do in this position?'" Despite never having swung a club, the 11-year-old had been learning the game since earning that first dollar and decided to offer some wisdom: "I say, 'You got to play to the left, and you come back right to play the green.' And he said, 'Come, we make a challenge.'" Davou handed him a three iron – not an easy club for even a more seasoned golfer. But Nlareb was up for the challenge and made it onto the green following the path he advised Davou to take. His success earned him his first golf club – that hard-to-hit three iron. Nlareb continued collecting and cleaning balls, practicing with his iron and developed friendships with the golfers. He often helped players aim shots and find their balls on the hilly course. All that time, he was on his own from age 11 to 17; no family, no school, just the money he could earn at markets and on the course. It was only once an aunt learned of his whereabouts and that he hadn't heard from his father in six years that Nlareb returned home and went back to school to take his caddie exams. "I was playing golf when I was 12, but I was not playing the regular golf like stroke play, 18 holes. No, I was playing three holes, one hole, half a hole sometimes," Nlareb remembered. Caddying at Yaoundé Golf Club allowed him to play complete rounds once a week – usually Mondays after events finished for the day. Things soon accelerated after that. "After a year, I was number one of the caddies," Nlareb said. "So, I turned pro in 2009 in Yaoundé." He didn't buy his first set of clubs until after turning professional. "My dream was to be the best player in the world, but my other was to beat Tiger Woods," Nlareb said. "(But) I realized that there's a big difference between the course Tiger Woods is playing and the course I play. … So, I (got) my first golf lesson when I was 24 (in 2015)," Nlareb told CNN Sports. After more than five years competing on African tours, Nlareb set goals for himself to slowly work toward those dreams. In 2015, he decided to try his hand at qualifying for the third division circuit in Europe, the Alps Tour. He had three young children and, with two quick wins at the Gabon and Senegal Opens, was at the peak of his career and personal life up to that point. That is until he fell ill at the Ein Bay Open in Egypt in February 2018. He awoke from a five-day coma to learn he had contracted bacterial meningitis and had developed septic shock. A terrified Nlareb was told he needed to have both legs above the knee and both arms above the elbow amputated. "I refused because I was so afraid," Nlareb said. "I say, 'Why?' and I say, 'No, no, no, don't do that. Leave me dead.'" The fear was all-encompassing: Nlareb couldn't imagine a life with no arms or legs. He waited a month until his visa in Egypt ended and transferred to a Cameroonian hospital. There, he once again heard a prognosis he wasn't ready to accept. His stepmother was working in Belgium at the time and called local hospitals to see if they would take Nlareb's case. He flew to Brussels where his latest doctor sat him down and explained amputation was his only viable option, although things had slightly improved. "He wrote everything (down for) me. He showed me. And I (saw) that difference between the last two months where I would get to be amputated and where I would be amputated right now." Three months after waking from his coma, Nlareb underwent an operation and had both legs below the knee and most of his fingers amputated. In his recovery process, the doctor explained the importance of taking things slow – starting with just 30 minutes a day of getting used to his prosthetics and building up from there. However, after a further three months in isolation to rebuild his immune system, he was eager to establish his new normal as soon as possible. "When they put me in the prosthetics, I walked all day long. But it was a big mistake," he remembered. "I wore off my skin. I was not able anymore to put the prosthetics on my feet. "There'd be pain for me. I was tight in my heart. I cry." Nlareb refused to think about golf after his amputations: "I forget about golf. I give up." He went "back (to Cameroon) to take care of my family, enjoy my life," adding that he didn't "want to play anymore golf because I was so sad." However, his friends had other plans. They forced him back onto a course a couple of months post-surgery to help his physical and mental recovery. His first swing back on the course went "50 meters (55 yards) with one hand." For the 6-foot-4-inch Nlareb, who was used to crushing his drives well over 200 yards before his illness, it was a difficult thing to take. It was at that point that he turned his focus to teaching. He went to school for two years to grow and develop as a golf teaching professional and began coaching a team in Cameroon: "I learned how to share my passion with people." However, a tournament at the end of 2019 left him fuming. "They played so bad. … I was so pissed off," Nlareb said. "How'd they do that? Even me, (hitting) 50 meters, I can make bogey in the hole. How can they play so bad?" Angry and disappointed, he didn't expect his then five-year-old daughter to find the solution. "She smiled and said, 'Dad, you need to play golf,'" Nlareb recalled. His daughter suggested wrapping a strap around his hands and club to give him the power and grip to swing with two hands again. "It was eight o'clock – in Cameroon, night comes at seven – I was like, 'Why don't you come with (me) and we run and go directly to golf?'" The father and daughter spent all night at the course. In 2019, Nlareb returned to the pro game via the African Golf Tour. Two years later, now residing in France, he made a remarkable comeback, making the cut in the very Alps Tour tournament he contracted meningitis three years earlier. The World Golf rankings for people with disabilities was created in 2019, a year after Nlareb's illness and amputations, while the Golf for the Disabled (G4D) Tour didn't launch until February 2022. Disability golf events are still in their infancy. Last year, Nlareb played in the third annual US Adaptive Open – his first time visiting the United States – where he won the multiple limb amputee category and placed fourth overall for men. He won the same category and finished tied for seventh overall this year. What did he earn for twice winning his category and two top-10 finishes? Nothing. "There is not currently a purse for the U.S. Adaptive Open," the USGA confirmed in an email to CNN Sports. "We announced recently that Deloitte will provide financial support in the form of travel-related expense reimbursements to all players in the field this year, and we are incredibly excited about that." Nlareb estimated it would have cost $10,000 to take part in the US Adaptive Open if he didn't have sponsors and hadn't received an exemption into the tournament due to his result at last summer's edition. "You pay for your flight ticket. You pay your reservation hotel, your car, and you pay your entry fee," theeighth-ranked player in the World Ranking for Golfers with Disabilitysaid. And he's lucky in that he's received free prosthetics since 2021 after meeting with Alain Montean, the then-president of a prosthetics company. Without these, Nlareb estimated it would cost him $50,000 every two years to replace. The exposure gained from the US Adaptive Open is significant, but paying thousands for events is not sustainable. Nlareb needs to play more golf to gain a following, but he can't play tournaments without sponsors and external funding. It's a vicious cycle that's hard to see a way out of. "I know I have good level, but it's not that easy without a sponsor because it's very expensive," Nlareb said. "Just to register in the event it's very expensive. Today, I'm a dad of three and it's not easy for me to take care of my children and to play my golf." "It's a big event. … So to be there, I'm coming close to my dream because from there, the world can know about my story," the 34-year-old told CNN Sports. "I need the support. I need the help. And I got a good game. I live for golf. I can't live without golf. Golf is my life." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

From sleeping on a golf course to turning pro: How Issa Nlareb rediscovered his love of the game after illness

From sleeping on a golf course to turning pro: How Issa Nlareb rediscovered his love of the game after illness Watching Issa Nlareb's sw...
US demands clarity from allies on their role in potential war over Taiwan, FT reportsNew Foto - US demands clarity from allies on their role in potential war over Taiwan, FT reports

(Reuters) -The Pentagon is urging Japan and Australia to clarify what role they would play if the U.S. and China went to war over Taiwan, the Financial Times reported on Saturday. Elbridge Colby, the U.S. under-secretary of defense for policy, has been pushing the matter during recent talks with defense officials of both countries, the report said, citing people familiar with the discussions. According to the newspaper, the reported request caught both Tokyo and Canberra off guard, as the U.S. itself does not offer a blank cheque guarantee to defend Taiwan. Reuters could not verify the report. The U.S. department of defense did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The U.S is Taiwan's most important arms supplier, despite a lack of formal diplomatic ties. Taiwan has faced increased military pressure from China, including several rounds of war games, as Beijing seeks to assert its sovereignty claims over the island. Taiwan rejects China's assertion of sovereignty. Colby was deputy assistant secretary of defense for strategy and force development during President Donald Trump's first term. Colby is known for arguing that the U.S. military should prioritize competition with China and shift its focus from the Middle East and Europe. (Reporting by Shivani Tanna in Bengaluru; Editing by Sharon Singleton, William Maclean)

US demands clarity from allies on their role in potential war over Taiwan, FT reports

US demands clarity from allies on their role in potential war over Taiwan, FT reports (Reuters) -The Pentagon is urging Japan and Australia ...
Rubio begins mass firings at State Department: Key takeawaysNew Foto - Rubio begins mass firings at State Department: Key takeaways

Secretary of State Marco Rubio beganmass firingsat the State Department on Monday, part of a reorganization plan to form a leaner foreign policy force that, he argues, will allow the United States to respond more nimbly by removing layers of bureaucracy. The department sentreduction in force (RIF) notices Friday morning to about 1,100 civil servants and 250 foreign service officers stationed in the U.S., with plans to cut its workforce further. Staff were directed to report to the office Friday along with their laptops, telephones, diplomatic passports and any other property of the department. The move prompted heavy pushback from Democrats and former diplomats who contended that by downsizing its diplomatic footprint the administration is putting national security at risk. Rubio, who is also President Trump's national security adviser, unveileda reorganization planfor the State Department in April, with plans to get rid of 132 offices and fold 137 other offices within the department. The U.S.'s top diplomat said Thursday the layoffs are a "very deliberate step to reorganize the State Department to be more efficient and more focused." "It's not a consequence of trying to get rid of people. But if you close the bureau, you don't need those positions. Understand that some of these are positions that are being eliminated, not people,"Rubio told reporterswhile in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Here are three takeaways from Friday's cuts: Democrats in Congress, ex-foreign service officers and labor unions have sharply criticized the cuts. Senate Democrats have argued the administration cannot afford a diminished diplomatic presence with multiple crises brewing around the world. "There are active conflicts and humanitarian crises in Ukraine, Sudan, Gaza, Haiti and Myanmar—to name a few. Now is the time to strengthen our diplomatic hand, not weaken it," said Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.), the ranking member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, in a statement backed by all Democrats on the committee. "From pursuing peaceful resolutions to out-competing China diplomatically and economically, we can't afford to not have experienced diplomats at the table," she added. The American Foreign Service Association, a union that represents tens of thousands of former and current diplomats, said Friday the layoffs are an indication to allies the U.S. is retreating from the global arena. "As allies look to the U.S. for reassurance and rivals test for weakness, the administration has chosen to sideline the very professionals best equipped to navigate this moment," the unionsaid in a statement. "Meanwhile, countries like China continue expanding their diplomatic reach and influence." Michael Rigas, the deputy secretary of State for management and resources,said in an internal messageto State Department workers Thursday that "once notifications have taken place, the Department will enter the final stage of its reorganization and focus its attention on delivering result-driven diplomacy." "Today, Little Marco proved himself to be a very small man," a former State Department official who supported Rubio during the 2016 primary and served in the first Trump administration told The Hill on Friday. Rubio is seeking to transform the State Department as part of the Trump administration's effort to revamp American foreign policy and slash the size of the federal government. The layoff notices were sent out to 1,107 civil servants and 246 foreign service officers. As part of the reorganization plan, "nearly" 3,000 employees are expected to leave the department. Foreign services officers will be put on administrative leave for 120 days; afterward, they would be cut. The separation period for most of the civil servants is 60 days, according to the notice. "The forthcoming reduction in force (RIF) action is necessary to better align the size, scope and composition of the Department's domestic workforce with the foreign policy priorities of the Secretary and nation," read the notice, sent to impacted employees, which was reviewed by The Hill. The cuts on Friday have affected the State Department's Coordinator for Afghan Relocation Efforts (CARE) office, which was tasked with relocating Afghan allies who had worked for or with the U.S. government in Afghanistan. The office's entire leadership has received RIF notices on Friday, Jessica Bradley Rushing, former deputy director of communications and engagement at CARE, told The Hill. "This isn't just a policy decision—it's a moral collapse," said Shawn VanDiver, the president of AfghanEvac, an advocacy group for Afghan refugees in the U.S. "At a time when Afghans are still stuck in harm's way, including in U.S. custody abroad, the people who made our government's most effective coordination effort possible are being shown the door." All of the leadership within the State Department's bureau of population, refugees, and migration has also gotten RIF notices, according to Rushing. Earlier this month, Rubioformalized the endof the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the U.S. government's foreign aid arm. The administration has argued the closure of USAID is part of the White House's push to root out "waste, fraud and abuse." "Development objectives have rarely been met, instability has often worsened, and anti-American sentiment has only grown. This era of government-sanctioned inefficiency has officially come to an end," Rubio wrote on July 1. The State Department come just days afterthe Supreme Court allowedthe Trump administration to continue layoffs across federal agencies. The nation's highest court found Trump's February executive order, directing federal agencies to brace for RIFs, was likely to be lawful. While the Supreme Court lifted the district judge's injunction, it allowed plaintiffs wiggle room to challenge plans of individual agencies in the future. "We express no view on the legality of any Agency RIF and Reorganization Plan produced or approved pursuant to the Executive Order and Memorandum," said the court's ruling. Liberal Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson dissented, characterizing the ruling as "hubristic and senseless." Justice Sonia Sotomayor in a one-paragraph solo opinion said she agreed with Jackson that Trump cannot "restructure federal agencies in a manner inconsistent with congressional mandates." "The plans themselves are not before this Court, at this stage, and we thus have no occasion to consider whether they can and will be carried out consistent with the constraints of law," Sotomayor cautioned. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Rubio begins mass firings at State Department: Key takeaways

Rubio begins mass firings at State Department: Key takeaways Secretary of State Marco Rubio beganmass firingsat the State Department on Mond...
Cooper Flagg's debut was ESPN's fourth-most watched Summer League game everNew Foto - Cooper Flagg's debut was ESPN's fourth-most watched Summer League game ever

Cooper Flagg is already an NBA star in one respect. Thefirst overall pick of the 2025 NBA Draftmade his Summer League debut on Thursdayand, alongside another ratings-driver in Bronny James, drew an average of 955,000 viewers via Nielsen metrics, ESPN announced Friday. That's the fourth-highest recorded viewership in Summer League history. The audience for the Dallas Mavericks-Los Angeles Lakers game reportedly peaked at 1.12 million viewers and represented a 167% increase over last year's Summer League average. Thursday's@dallasmavsvs.@Lakersmatchup — featuring@Cooper_Flagg's debut — was the fourth-most watched Summer League game everpic.twitter.com/C4JAGeT5Zb — ESPN PR (@ESPNPR)July 11, 2025 The three games that saw more viewers than Flagg's, and the players who drew those eyeballs: 1. Zion Williamson vs. R.J. Barrett in 2019, 1.61 million2. Victor Wembanyama vs. Brandon Miller in 2023, 1.39 million3. Lonzo Ball vs. Jayson Tatum in 2017, 1.1 million4. Cooper Flagg vs. Bronny James in 2025, 955K It's worth noting Summer League Nielsen numbers don't go back very far. For example, LeBron James' Summer League debut in 2003 was aired on NBA TV, which was not Nielsen-rated at the time. Flagg entered the NBA as hyped as any American prospect since James, after a single year at Duke in which he earned consensus National Player of the Year honors. He had an uneven performance on Thursday, posting some nice highlights but going scoreless in the second half with 10 points on 5-of-21 shooting. The Mavericks won the game 87-85, with Bronny James also going scoreless in the second half of an eight-point performance. Flagg is scheduled to play his second game on Saturday against No. 2 pick Dylan Harper and the San Antonio Spurs, but he might not be long for Summer League. He has very little to prove in Las Vegas and the Mavericks have made very clear they view him as a key component of a likely playoff team, so they're not going to play him for the sake of playing him.

Cooper Flagg's debut was ESPN's fourth-most watched Summer League game ever

Cooper Flagg's debut was ESPN's fourth-most watched Summer League game ever Cooper Flagg is already an NBA star in one respect. Thef...
Willy Adames, Jung Hoo Lee each drive in three runs as Giants send Dodgers to seventh straight lossNew Foto - Willy Adames, Jung Hoo Lee each drive in three runs as Giants send Dodgers to seventh straight loss

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Willy Adames homered in the second inning and hit a two-run triple in San Francisco's five-run fifth and the Giants sent the rival Los Angeles Dodgers to their seventh straight loss with an 8-7 victory Friday night. San Francisco pulled within four games of the first-place Dodgers in the NL West. Dominic Smith homered leading off the fifth after Jung Hoo Lee's two-run triple in the fourth put San Francisco ahead against Dustin May (5-6). Lee beat out an infield single in the fifth to drive in another run. Shohei Ohtani hit his 32nd home run of the season into McCovey Cove beyond the right-field wall for a go-ahead two-run shot in the third inning. Ohtani connected after Hyeseong Kim's leadoff single marked the first hit of the night against Logan Webb (9-6), who walked Ohtani in a nine-pitch battle to begin the game and finished with six runs, six hits and six strikeouts over 5 1/3 innings. Camilo Doval allowed Mookie Betts' single then walked Freddie Freeman before getting Will Smith to ground into a game-ending double play for his 15th save. Ohtani crushed a 91.1 mph cutter on Webb's first offering of the at-bat and the ball traveled 410 feet. Michael Conforto's two-run homer in the sixth chased Webb after he hit Betts with a pitch. The Dodgers have their worst losing streak since Sept. 2-11 2017, when they dropped 11 in a row. May, who beat the Giants on June 15, was tagged for seven earned runs on five hits in 4 2/3 innings. Key play Following his triple, Lee was called out at home on a fly by Casey Schmitt and a sensational throw by left fielder Conforto. The Giants challenged the call and it was upheld on review. Key stat Ohtani's blast marked the 65th home run into the water by an opponent in Oracle Park's 25-year history and 171st in all — 35 of those belong to home run king Barry Bonds. Up next Ohtani (0-1, 1.50 ERA) pitches Saturday opposite Giants RHP Landen Roupp (6-5, 3.39). ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Willy Adames, Jung Hoo Lee each drive in three runs as Giants send Dodgers to seventh straight loss

Willy Adames, Jung Hoo Lee each drive in three runs as Giants send Dodgers to seventh straight loss SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Willy Adames homere...
Casar, Crockett call for FEMA, NOAA details on Texas flood prep, responseNew Foto - Casar, Crockett call for FEMA, NOAA details on Texas flood prep, response

Texas Democratic Reps. Greg Casar and Jasmine Crockett are demanding details and documents from federal agencies taskedwith tracking and respondingto disasters after catastrophic flooding in recent dayskilled more than 100 peoplein Texas Hill Country. Crockett and CasarpennedlettersFriday seeking information from the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) aboutpreparations for and response tothe Texas flood. Their inquiries center on whether recent Department of Government Efficiencycuts to the National Weather Service(NWS) played a role or if Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Kristi Noem, who oversees FEMA, impededsearch and rescue effortswith certain rules. The letters from Casar and Crockett, who sit on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, were also signed by the committee's ranking member Rep. Robert Garcia (D-Calif.). "The tragic loss of life suffered underscores the urgent need to understand whatcontributed to this disaster," the lawmakers wrote in the letters. "Rigorous oversight is needed not only to provide answers to grieving communities in Central Texas, but to save lives in future extreme weather events." In their letter directed to FEMA acting chief David Richardson, the Democratic lawmakers asked the agency to providerecords of communicationswith Noem and her top aides, as well as all documents and discussions regarding state and local requests to DHS or FEMA. CNNreported Thursdaythat Noem's cost control measures that require her direct approval for all contracts and grants more than $100,000 may have slowed the federal response to the Texas floods. Noem rejected the notion during an appearance on Fox News later that day. "Fake News," she said. "It's absolutely trash what they're doing by saying that." President Trump, whois in the Lone Star Stateto survey the damage, has also come to the former South Dakota governor's defense,telling NBC News late Thursdaythat Noem was "right on the ball" and has "done a great job." The Texas Democrats are specifically requesting "any policies, procedures, memos, or internal reports detailing the DHS Secretary's authority related to spending rules" and "any written directive, policy, memo, or other document related to the requirement to get Secretary Noem's approval for any contracts or grants over $100,000." Their letter to NOAA, meanwhile, centered on how the public was alerted about the threat of dangerous flash flooding. They requested communications that took place between NOAA and Texas authorities and with local media, copies of NWS emergency alerts and a "detailed explanation" about how the national Emergency Alert System and Wireless Emergency Alert System were used. The lawmakers alsopenned a third letterFriday, urging the Commerce Department's inspector general, which oversees NOAA, to conduct an investigation into disaster warning systems. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to The Hill.

Casar, Crockett call for FEMA, NOAA details on Texas flood prep, response

Casar, Crockett call for FEMA, NOAA details on Texas flood prep, response Texas Democratic Reps. Greg Casar and Jasmine Crockett are demandi...

 

MARIO VOUX © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com