La Barbecue restaurant owner dies at 51
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:34:48 GMT
Editor's Note: The video above shows KXAN News Today’s top headlines for June 14, 2023.AUSTIN (KXAN) -- LeAnn Mueller, the owner of la Barbecue in east Austin, died Wednesday at 51 years old, according to a press release.Mueller, a successful chef and photographer, opened la Barbecue with her wife and co-owner Ali Clem in 2012. The popular Central Texas barbecue spot started in a south Austin food trailer park before moving to a brick-and-mortar location in east Austin, per the release.Mueller died Wednesday morning surrounded by her closest friends and family, the release said. Her family's connection with barbecue inspired her own path. Her grandfather started Louie Mueller Barbecue in Taylor. The restaurant was taken over by her father, Bobby Mueller, who won a James Beard Award in 2006.Her family's barbecue legacy "deeply inspired" and fueled "her desire to open her own award-winning restaurant," the release stated.Mueller grew up in Central Texas. Before creating la Barbecue, s...Austin airport advisory group recommends enhanced bus, mass transit to AUS
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:34:48 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) -- The City of Austin's Airport Advisory Commission passed a recommendation Wednesday that encouraged enhanced public transit access to the Austin-Bergstrom International Airport (AUS).Earlier this month, the City of Austin, CapMetro and Austin Transit Partnership formally adopted a Phase 1 light rail service route for Project Connect, the city's mass transit program in the works. It’s official: Austin adopts Phase 1 of Project Connect light rail plan Under that design, the guaranteed route would run from 38th Street to Oltorf Street to Yellow Jacket Lane. While the promised route doesn't go directly to AUS, the now-approved recommendation does prioritize extending it from Yellow Jacket Lane to the airport, should there be sufficient funding available.Austin city and transit leaders approved the 38th Street to Oltorf Street to Yellow Jacket Lane route option as the first phase of light rail services to be built under Project Connect. (Courtesy: Austin Transit Partner...What to know about medications and summer heat
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:34:48 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) — Summer heat is here and impacts our health in obvious ways, such as heat-related illness and sunburns, but it can also impact our medications. Serra Holthaus, a University of Texas at Austin student pharmacist intern on rotation at the Peoples Pharmacy, said people should always check with their pharmacist about the potential side effects of their medication. "Anything with benzoyl peroxide or some retinols," Holthaus said. "I'd stay away from those if you're going to be outside a lot during the summer, and use something else for now." FORECAST: Hottest temperatures still to come These medications are often used to treat acne. During the summer heat, they can cause excessive drying and make the skin more sensitive to the sun.According to Texas A&M's Vital Record, some medications lose effectiveness when subjected to extreme heat. Some medications affected this way include inhalers, antibiotics and nitroglycerin.She also strongly urges people to not keep medicat...APD's Mounted Patrol unit trains for managing big crowds
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:34:48 GMT
SAN MARCOS, Texas (KXAN) --- On Wednesday, dozens of police officers from across the state were in San Marcos training with their horses. During the annual Mounted Patrol Training, officers ran through drills and formations in an effort to help them better prepare for managing large crowds. APD said it currently has 14 police officers, two supervisors and 16 horses in its Mounted Patrol Unit. (Photo: KXAN) "Some of the formations that you saw were column formations, line formations and wedge formations. They're formations that are very effective in crowd management," APD Mounted Patrol Unit Sergeant Al Garibay said. Garibay said this helps them break up crowds on Sixth Street during the weekend or if there are protests. "Basically [it] allows us to safely move the pedestrians that are on the street, and encourage them to move to the sidewalks," Garibay said. "In cases of like a riot or protest, we can effectively move them without people getting hurt."APD Corporal James Pittman said...How Mexico's agriculture burn affects Austin local weather
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:34:48 GMT
AUSTIN (KXAN) -- The haze happens every spring and it can make you feel bad.The sky loses that beautiful azure, blue hue. Though its occurrence doesn't originate in the Austin area, if the wind is blowing just right, Central Texas and a good deal of the state will still see the haze's effects. Why is the sky so hazy in Austin? The Texas Commission On Environmental Quality attributes this recent haze to "a good amount of atmospheric moisture" helping to partially contribute to the hazy sky. The other factor that led to the haze partnering with the clouds is smoke that wafted into our sky from the agriculture burning ongoing in northern Mexico. These fires occur in the northern part of the country as well as the Yucatan. A south-to-southeast wind flow will cause the smoke from the Yucatan to travel across the western Gulf to our coastline and further into the coastal plain on the Interstate 35 corridor.South and southeast winds bring in agriculture burning smoke from MexicoThe south...Ravens sign rookie WR Zay Flowers, completing six-player draft class
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:34:48 GMT
The Ravens’ first draft pick was their last to sign, but all six members of their 2023 class are now officially under contract.Rookie wide receiver Zay Flowers, the No. 22 overall pick in April’s draft, signed his rookie contract Wednesday, the team announced. It’s a four-year, $14 million fully guaranteed deal with a $7.2 million signing bonus, his agent confirmed to The Baltimore Sun.Flowers, a South Florida native and former Boston College star, headlines a group that includes Clemson linebacker Trenton Simpson (third round, No. 86), Ole Miss defensive end Tavius Robinson (fourth round, No. 124), Stanford cornerback Kyu Blu Kelly (fifth round, No. 157), Oregon offensive lineman Malaesala Aumavae-Laulu (sixth round, No. 199) and Southern California offensive lineman Andrew Vorhees (seventh round, No. 229).It’s the Ravens’ smallest class since 2009 when they also selected six players.The 5-foot-9, 182-pound Flowers joins a revamped wide receiver group ...Bret Stephens: Lock him up
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:34:48 GMT
For many years, but especially the past three, conservatives have warned of the dangers of a criminal justice system that is overly reluctant to put and keep dangerous people in prison. The law is the law. Violations of it should be prosecuted. We are, and must remain, the land of equal justice, not social justice dictated by the ideological fixations of angry Americans.These same conservatives should try being consistent when it comes to the federal indictment of Donald Trump.It is stunning to read the grand jury’s 37-count indictment, with its depictions of a former president treating the law with the contemptuous disdain of a mafia don — but with none of a don’s concern for covering his tracks. It is even more stunning to hear what some of those in the legal community who have been defenders of Trump have to say about it.Alan Dershowitz: “It is the kind of evidence every defense lawyer dreads and every prosecutor dreams about,” the retired Harvard law professor wrote of Trump’s r...Other voices: Fraud and graft thrived during the pandemic, and beyond
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:34:48 GMT
In these days of rampant virtue signaling, politicians, corporations and socially wired individuals all try to convince you that they care the most about doing the right thing. Alas, while we’ve all been recovering from the COVID-19 crisis, plenty of old-fashioned grifters have seized the day.On Sunday The Associated Press released a stunning investigation into pandemic fraud finding that large numbers of Americans — of all stripes, it appears — fraudulently helped themselves to colossal chunks of federal COVID-19 relief money.Any huge program created in an emergency is bound to encounter some corrupt actors, but the scale of the fraud in this instance indicates that the federal government did a thoroughly lousy job of erecting the necessary protections as it cut check after check to the unworthy. The news agency called it “the greatest grift in U.S. history,” and that’s saying something.The AP estimated that fraudsters potentially stole more than...Stephen L. Carter: How Trump’s indictment compares to other espionage act cases
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:34:48 GMT
Is former President Donald Trump being treated unfairly by the special counsel? That’s the claim being made by many of his supporters following his indictment last week on felony charges related to hundreds of classified documents found at his Mar-a-Lago estate.The critics are right that the case is unusual, but the former president’s own behavior helps distinguish it from most of the precedents. Allow me to explain.I should say at the start that I don’t root for a particular side in criminal cases. But I do believe that like cases should be prosecuted alike.We should be clear, moreover, that the question of whether Trump is being treated differently is an argument only about the 31 counts of the indictment that charge the former president with willfully retaining sensitive documents in violation of Title 18, section 793(e), of the United States Code — a part of the Espionage Act. The six other counts involve obstruction of justice and false statements to inv...Letters: Nothing for the actual victims of opioid abuse?
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 07:34:48 GMT
Does any money go to the actual victims?In the late ’90s Minnesota sued the tobacco companies and received $6.5 billion. The money was divided between the state of Minnesota and Blue Cross-Blue Shield. It’s tough to find out how Minnesota spent the money. Some say Medicaid was paid back any expenditures and Blue Cross was paid for the losses it occurred.Insurance companies collect premiums and and over a course of time they make the losses back by raising premiums. My point here is the government and the insurance companies were rewarded but not one victim of addicted tobacco users or their families who suffered the effects by either death or health problems and financial loss got a plug nickle.Now again we have another suit about opioid addiction and deaths where the $416 million will be rewarded to state of Minnesota, 25 percent, and the rest going to cities and counties in Minnesota to be spent as they see fit.Again not one cent to victims or the families who suffered...Latest news
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