Monday, April 15, 2013

San Francisco's cable cars rack up accidents -- and millions in legal bills, settlements

Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP file

From left, Franco Garavanno, Gustavo Ferrari and German Garavanno ride a cable car up Hyde Street in San Francisco while visiting from Buenos Aires on Jan. 21, 2011. Cable cars are a top tourist draw in San Francisco -- but they also stand out for the inordinate number of accidents and the millions of dollars annually the city pays out to settle lawsuits.

By Paul Elias, The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO --?In this city of innumerable tourist attractions, the clanging, hill-conquering cable cars stand out as a top draw.

The quaint conveyances also stand out for the inordinate number of accidents and the millions of dollars annually the city pays out to settle lawsuits for broken bones, severed feet and bad bruises caused when 19th-century technology runs headlong into 21st-century city traffic and congestion.

Cable cars average about an accident a month and routinely rank among the most accident-prone mass transportation modes in the country per vehicle mile traveled annually, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation. Over the last 10 years, city officials have reported 126 accidents injuring 151 people.

After the latest serious accident ? when seven people were injured after a cable car slammed to an unexpected stop after hitting a small bolt in the track ? The Associated Press obtained through a public records request a listing of cable car-related legal settlements over the last three years.


Those figures show the city paying nearly $8 million to settle about four dozen legal claims.

The city has paid on average $12 million annually to settle all claims connected to its mass transportation system that in addition to cable cars consists of electric street cars and buses, which travel many more miles and carry many more passengers.

Two faces of an icon
City officials acknowledge that the open air cable cars, which ply only eight miles of track, produce a disproportionate amount of accident-related costs.

But they say the cars are a much beloved and valuable part of the city's life and character.

Their images are inscribed on the San Francisco Giants World Series rings. The cars have been immortalized in song and in television ads selling rice. And tourists line up dozens deep even in freezing weather for a chance to ride over the city's Nob and Russian hills.

"The iconic cable cars of San Francisco are a National Historic Landmark and we work every day to make them safer," San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee said, adding, "While accidents and injuries are down from just a few years ago, we are always working to improve the system as a whole."

Marcio Jose Sanchez / AP file

Visitors wait to board a cable car in San Francisco's Union Square in 2010.

Federal transportation figures show 19 injuries and 16 accidents last year, the second highest amount reported in the last 10 years. There were 36 accidents reported in 2004.

Two months ago, five passengers and two workers were injured after the bolt caused their cable car to slam to a sudden stop, tossing them violently inside the vehicle. The conductor had facial and tongue injuries and the driver suffered internal injuries and cracked ribs, transit officials said.

Legal claims are expected, as they always are after a cable car accident.

Nymphomaniac lawsuit
The city has been settling lawsuits almost since the cable cars began operation in 1893. One woman won a 1970 jury verdict of $50,000 after she claimed that a minor accident on a cable car she was riding turned her into a nymphomaniac.

"The 19th Century technology of the cable cars does pose some challenges," said Paul Rose, a spokesman for the city agency that oversees San Francisco mass transit. "While one accident is too many and we're always working to improve safety, these incidents are rare."

San Francisco remains the only place on the planet with a true, manually operated cable-car system serving the public.

First introduced in the late 1800s to save the strain on horses hauling carts up the city's steep inclines, the 15,500-pound cable-powered cars grip a continuously moving underground cable with pliers-like gear to travel the streets of San Francisco.

They are a San Francisco icon vital to the city's booming tourism industry.

A survey commissioned by the San Francisco Visitors and Conventions Bureau found the top four tourist activities in the city were dining, shopping, visiting museum and riding the cable cars. An estimated 7 million ride the cable cars annually, the vast majority tourists.

The biggest single payout over the last three years went to John Gainor, who received $3 million in November 2011 because his foot had to be amputated after it got caught between the cable car he was standing on and a parked vehicle.

Another $4 million went to the four victims of a runaway cable car that sped down a notoriously steep San Francisco hill before leaving the tracks and careening onto the sidewalk. The brakeman fell down outside the cable car as he was pushing it and couldn't get back aboard. A tourist from Texas suffered a broken femur and three others were seriously injured.

Linda Cvilikas, who tore tendons in her knee when a cable car she was riding came to a sudden halt on Nob Hill in 2011, said: "One minute I was standing and the next minute I was on top of my husband and a really large gentleman fell on top of me.

"That thing stopped and we all fell like dominoes," she said. The city paid Cvilikas $16,000 and her husband, John, another $2,500 to settle the Nebraska couple's legal claims. "It's safe to say that I won't be riding the cable cars again if I return to San Francisco," she said.?

? 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653381/s/2ab0ea3b/l/0Lusnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A40C140C177424340Esan0Efranciscos0Ecable0Ecars0Erack0Eup0Eaccidents0Eand0Emillions0Ein0Elegal0Ebills0Esettlements0Dlite/story01.htm

new york times columbine breaking news Google News Newton virginia tech shooting Bbc News

Alternative metal bassist Chi Cheng dead at 42

By Brendan O'Brien

(Reuters) - Alternative metal bassist Chi Cheng of the Deftones has died, four years after a car accident left him a coma.

Cheng died on Saturday after being brought to a hospital emergency room, according to a website set up to raise funds for the stricken musician. He was 42.

"I know you will always remember him as a giant of a man on stage with a heart for every one of you," his mother wrote in a statement on the site. "He left this world with me singing songs he liked in his ear."

No cause of death was given on the site. It was not immediately clear where Cheng died.

Cheng was seriously injured during a head-on car collision in Santa Clara, California, in 2008. Cheng was not wearing a seat belt and was thrown from the vehicle, local media reported at the time.

"Rest in peace Chi Cheng," wrote the band's lead vocalist, Chino Moreno, on his Facebook page, where more than 2,000 messages were left by fans eulogizing Cheng.

The Deftones, an alternative metal band out of Sacramento, California, was founded in 1988. The band won a Grammy for the Best Metal Performance in 2000.

(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Edith Honan and Eric Beech)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/alternative-metal-bassist-chi-cheng-dead-42-231043535.html

Royal Rumble 2013 senior bowl norovirus Eclampsia Kendrick Lamar JJ Abrams New Orleans Pelicans

NY woman charged with stalking Hugh Jackman

FILE - In this Saturday, Feb. 9, 2013 file photo, actor Hugh Jackman poses at the photo call of the film Les Miserables at the 63rd edition of the Berlinale, International Film Festival in Berlin. Police say 47-year-old Kathleen Thurston is charged with stalking Jackman after approaching him, crying and shouting, and throwing a razor at the Australian actor while he was working out at a gym in New York, on Saturday, April 13, 2013. (AP Photo/Gero Breloer, File)

FILE - In this Saturday, Feb. 9, 2013 file photo, actor Hugh Jackman poses at the photo call of the film Les Miserables at the 63rd edition of the Berlinale, International Film Festival in Berlin. Police say 47-year-old Kathleen Thurston is charged with stalking Jackman after approaching him, crying and shouting, and throwing a razor at the Australian actor while he was working out at a gym in New York, on Saturday, April 13, 2013. (AP Photo/Gero Breloer, File)

(AP) ? It was a hair-raising experience for actor Hugh Jackman at a New York City gym.

Radio station 1010 WINS says Jackman was working out in a gym Saturday morning in Manhattan's West Village neighborhood when a woman rushed in, crying and shouting that she loved him.

The "X-Men" star told the radio station on Sunday that the run-in was frightening.

Police say 47-year-old Kathleen Thurston pulled out a razor filled with hair and threw it at him, then fled and was arrested several blocks from the gym. Jackman wasn't hurt.

Thurston is charged with stalking and awaits arraignment. It's unclear whether she has a lawyer.

Police say she has gone near the victim and his family before.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-04-14-Jackman-Stalking/id-155e6d1d9fd5450881d08d63dd37bd23

Ryan Dempster Phelps NBC Olympics Live Olympic medal count Medal Count 2012 London 2012 Fencing olympics

Sunday, April 14, 2013

Kobe Bryant Achilles Injury Prompts Epic Facebook Rant

Source:

bruce springsteen grammy nominations lil boosie bobbi kristina brown new edition austerity rihanna and chris brown back together

This is a 'critical time', Kerry tells China president amid North Korea tensions

Secretary of State John Kerry issued a stern warning Friday, telling Kim Jong Un North Korea will not be accepted as a nuclear power. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

By Arshad Mohammed and Ben Blanchard, Reuters

BEIJING -- U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry met China's top leaders on Saturday in a bid to persuade them to exert pressure on North Korea to scale back its belligerent rhetoric and, eventually, return to nuclear talks.

Traveling to Beijing for the first time as secretary of state, Kerry made no secret of his desire to see China take a more activist stance toward North Korea, which in recent weeks has threatened nuclear war against the United States and South Korea.

As the North's main trading partner, financial backer and the closest thing it has to a diplomatic ally, China has a unique ability to use its leverage against the impoverished, isolated state, Kerry said in the South Korean capital, Seoul, on Friday before leaving for Beijing.

"Mr. President, this is obviously a critical time with some very challenging issues -- issues on the Korean Peninsula, the challenge of Iran and nuclear weapons, Syria and the Middle East, and economies around the world that are in need of a boost," Kerry told Chinese President Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People.

Kerry said after the meeting that his talks with Xi were "constructive and forward-leaning", though he did not elaborate.

China had a testy relationship with Kerry's predecessor, Hillary Clinton, believing her to be too abrasive in their disagreements over everything from human rights to territorial disputes like the South China Sea.

Pentagon intelligence has assessed that North Korea likely does have the ability to launch nuclear missiles, which raises the stakes for John Kerry, who just landed in South Korea, to find a diplomatic way out of the crisis. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

"Clinton added fuel to the mistrust during her four-year term. We hope Kerry can pull it in the other direction," China's widely read and influential Global Times tabloid said in an editorial.

Kerry's visit to Asia, which will include a stop in Tokyo on Sunday, takes place after weeks of shrill North Korean threats of war since the imposition of new U.N. sanctions in response to its third nuclear test in February.

North Korea has repeatedly said it will not abandon nuclear weapons which it said on Friday were its "treasured" guarantor of security.

No sign of imminent missile launch
North Korean television on Saturday made no mention of Kerry's visit and devoted most of its reports to preparations for Monday's celebrations marking the birth date of state founder Kim Il-Sung.

These included a numerous floral tributes and grandiose flower show, foreign visitors seeing the sights of the capital ahead of the festivities and the unveiling of a monument in a provincial town.

But Rodong Sinmun, the ruling Workers' Party's newspaper, issued a fresh denunciation of joint U.S.-South Korean military exercises, saying: "The outbreak of nuclear war has now become a fait accompli, owing to the U.S. and the South Korean puppet forces.

"If the enemies dare provoke (North Korea) while going reckless, it will immediately blow them up with an annihilating strike with the use of powerful nuclear means."

However, South Korea's Yonhap news agency, quoting a government source, said North Korea had not moved any of its mobile missile launchers for the past two days after media reports that as many as five missiles had been moved into place on the country's east coast.

Yonhap said there had been no signs of any movement by the mobile launchers since Thursday "or that missile launches are imminent".

U.S. 'fanning the flames'?
Beijing has been reluctant to apply pressure on Pyongyang, fearing the instability that could result if the North were to implode and send floods of refugees into China, and has looked askance at U.S. military drills in South Korea.

North Korea is trending online and has been searched on Google more than ever before now that the country's outlandish threats have gotten the world's attention. Kim Jong-un is still expected to launch a missile, and some analysts predict they will then ask for money not to do it again. NBC's Richard Engel reports.

China's official Xinhua news agency said in a commentary that Washington had itself been "fanning the flames" on the Korean peninsula with its shows of force.

"It keeps sending more fighters, bombers and missile-defense ships to the waters of East Asia and carrying out massive military drills with Asian allies in a dramatic display of preemptive power," it said.

However, U.S. officials believe China's rhetoric on North Korea has begun to shift, pointing to a recent speech by China's Xi in which -- without referring explicitly to Pyongyang -- he said no country "should be allowed to throw a region and even the whole world into chaos for selfish gain".

Kerry told reporters in Seoul that if North Korea's 30-year-old leader went ahead with the launch of a medium-range missile, he would be making "a huge mistake."

At a news conference in Seoul on Friday and in a U.S.-South Korean joint statement issued on Saturday, Kerry signaled the U.S. preference for diplomacy to end the tension, but stressed North Korea must take "meaningful" steps on denuclearization.

The United States and its allies believe the North violated the a 2005 aid-for-denuclearization deal by conducting a nuclear test in 2006 and pursuing a uranium enrichment program that would give it a second path to a nuclear weapon in addition to its plutonium-based program.

David Guttenfelder / AP

As chief Asia photographer for the Associated Press, David Guttenfelder has had unprecedented access to communist North Korea. Here's a rare look at daily life in the secretive country.

Related:

John Kerry in Seoul: North Korea missile launch would be 'huge mistake'

Missile launch is North Korea's exit strategy, experts say

Google+ Hangout featuring NBC News correspondents in Seoul, Beijing and Tokyo

Full North Korea coverage from NBC News

Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

Source: http://feeds.nbcnews.com/c/35002/f/653387/s/2aac6026/l/0Lworldnews0Bnbcnews0N0C0Inews0C20A130C0A40C130C177326150Ethis0Eis0Ea0Ecritical0Etime0Ekerry0Etells0Echina0Epresident0Eamid0Enorth0Ekorea0Etensions0Dlite/story01.htm

chardon high school shooting mark martin cleveland news daytona race the cutting edge fox 8 news indy 500

Venezuela election: Is a vote for the opposition a vote against your mother?

A pro-government campaign slogan ahead of Sunday's presidential election underscores the focus on a key constituency of former president Ch?vez, who said there could be no socialism without feminism.?

By Whitney Eulich,?Staff writer / April 13, 2013

A pregnant woman displays the slogan "My future is safe with Maduro" at a rally for acting Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro on Tuesday, April 9 in the run-up for Sunday's election.

Ramon Espinosa/AP

Enlarge

Caracas, Venezuela; and Boston

If you vote for the opposition, you don?t love your mother ? at least according to one bold pro-government slogan in the leadup to Venezuela?s presidential election tomorrow.

Skip to next paragraph

' + google_ads[0].line2 + '
' + google_ads[0].line3 + '

'; } else if (google_ads.length > 1) { ad_unit += ''; } } document.getElementById("ad_unit").innerHTML += ad_unit; google_adnum += google_ads.length; return; } var google_adnum = 0; google_ad_client = "pub-6743622525202572"; google_ad_output = 'js'; google_max_num_ads = '1'; google_feedback = "on"; google_ad_type = "text"; google_adtest = "on"; google_image_size = '230x105'; google_skip = '0'; // -->

What may sound like a schoolyard jab in fact touches on an important legacy of former President Hugo Ch?vez?s 14-year administration: Poor women were some of the main beneficiaries of the charismatic socialist leader?s welfare programs. Mr. Ch?vez created scores of social missions, which brought services like adult literacy education, subsidized food, and free healthcare into many low-income neighborhoods ? and, in the process, gave many women more influence and even political power.

?There is a before and after Ch?vez when it comes to women in Venezuela,? says Mercedes Chac?n, editor-in-chief of CCS, a Caracas-based pro-Ch?vez daily.

?The awakening of [poor] women started under chavismo,? she says.

Although the ?mama? slogan implies that?voting for someone other than Ch?vez?s handpicked successor, Nicol?s Maduro, could put these programs at risk, both Mr. Maduro and opposition candidate Henrique Capriles say they don?t plan to dismantle Ch?vez?s social missions, which were created by presidential decree and funded by petrodollars. But high inflation, lagging oil production, and issues of cash flow?could mean changes may be unavoidable.

'Central protagonists'

Ch?vez?s Bolivarian revolution emphasized grassroots political change, and social programs like the missions were an attempt not only?to lift up the poor, but also to engage them in the political process. The execution was often far from perfect ? many programs were thrown together on the fly or left underfunded. At times Bolivarian missions were redundant and added a layer of bureaucracy or space for corruption.

Trusted government statistics and program impact evaluations are difficult to come by, but to communities that for generations had felt excluded or ignored, the acknowledgement of their existence and needs was a tide change.

Mothers exchange ideas

Every Tuesday afternoon in El Valle, a poor barrio in the southern part of Venezuela?s capital Caracas, some 200 women gather to discuss everything from access to healthcare and clean water to dealing with sewage. They are beneficiaries of the Madres del Barrio mission, which provides financial support and a space to share concerns for mothers living in extreme poverty.

?My life changed socially, economically, politically [under Ch?vez],? says Nancy Contreras, a mother of two.

?Now I can talk in public, I can say what I feel. Before I couldn?t,? she says.

Ms. Contreras says she and her neighbors are ordinary women and housewives turned community leaders. Whatever issues come up in the barrio, they discuss them during the meeting and find solutions.

?We all share our thoughts. We talk of what we need and what we can improve in our neighborhoods,? says another mother, Nancy Hern?ndez.

?Ch?vez made popular women central protagonists in his politics,? says Sujatha Fernandes, an associate professor of sociology at Queens College in New York and author of ?Barrio Women and Popular Politics in Ch?vez?s Venezuela.? The government put up billboards representing mostly poor and mixed race women as social workers and doctors, for example. ?It was really important in giving women a sense of what they could achieve in life.?

He tapped into established feminist movements in 1999 when rewriting the Constitution, including articles that guaranteed equal treatment for men and women and recognized domestic labor as an economic contribution. He even famously said there could be no socialism without feminism.

Targeting low-income women wasn?t an accident under chavismo. For starters, women tend to outvote men in Venezuela, says Rachel Elfenbein, a scholar at Canada?s Simon Fraser University. Ms. Elfenbein has spent the last year and a half studying an article in Venezuela?s Constitution that recognizes unpaid housework as economic activity, entitling citizens to social security.

And Ch?vez was wildly popular with the poor and working classes, who were long excluded by the two parties that dominated politics. Through this base, Ch?vez was able to clinch four presidential election victories in 14 years. Just under half of Venezuela?s poorest people are women, according to the World Bank, and this share of the population stood to gain the most from welfare changes.

?In the absence of the state it is often women who take on social responsibilities? like searching for water, caring for the health and education of family members, and putting food on the table, says Elfenbein.

?[Poor] women and men experienced chavismo differently because of the different gender roles in society,? she says.

Decisionmaking

Poor women not only benefited from missions, but served as their vital backbone. The government was able to engage neighborhood women in the distribution of services and rolling out missions, and in return, often received free labor.

?In a lot of communities it?s women holding these programs up,? says Elfenbein, while noting that their involvement has not necessarily created pathways into the formal labor force, or toward greater gender equality.

?I think the difficulty is that the political empowerment hasn?t necessarily been accompanied by providing other means of real economic empowerment,? says Claudia Piras, an economist at the Inter-American Development Bank who focuses on gender, labor markets, and entrepreneurship in Latin America. ?Like increasing not only their rights but their means to really be able to participate in the labor force and have better jobs and a more decent living.?

For example, Venezuela has one of the largest gaps between men and women with bank accounts at formal financial institutions. There is a 16.9 percent difference in the number of female and male account holders, compared to the average of 9 percent in Latin American and Caribbean countries as a whole, according to the World Bank.?

Though female participation in government programs was noticeably high under chavismo ? take the 200-woman turnout a week for Madres del Barrio in El Valle ? the inherent locus of decisionmaking power did not noticeably shift.

?I would sit in on a health committee meeting in the barrio San Agustin, and there would be 35 women and two men,? says Ms. Fernandes. But??the two men were the [ones] making the big decisions.??

?The structure of the patriarchy is still present,? she says.?

And Elfenbein points out that despite the chorus of chavista women celebrating their increased voice during the Ch?vez era, there is a built-in hurdle to being critical of the government.?

?When you?re reliant on the government for social benefits for the survival or your household, how free are you going to feel? ? Would they feel free to discuss how the government isn?t meeting their needs in front of government authorities? I don?t know.?

On a national level, the image of a male-controlled society is visible in the national assembly, where less than 20 percent of the elected representatives are female. And only four of Venezuela?s 24 states have female governors. But three out of the five branches of government have female appointees heading the judicial, electoral, and so-called citizen branches. Several women also direct ministries, including Edm?e Bentacourt, the minister of trade, and Nancy P?rez, who heads the ministry of women, created in 2009.

An opportunity?

Maduro, Ch?vez's choice to succeed him, is believed to have a leg up in tomorrow's election with a strong sympathy vote and access to state media reflected in his average 16-point lead, calculated in early April. But neither he nor Capriles has Ch?vez?s charisma.

Maduro might create an initiative, says Fernandes, ?but without Ch?vez there to inspire and motivate the masses, participation could drop.?

There?s another lens through which to view the future, however. Without Ch?vez dominating the conversation, a new political sphere may yield fresh opportunities at the community level, Fernandes says:??A new kind of decisionmaking could open up.? ?

The next administration could present ?a real opportunity,? says Elfenbein. ?Chavez was an amazing catalyst for the Bolivarian process, but he was also the Achilles heel.?

It?s unclear, she says, to what extent women were ?participating in political decisionmaking versus showing up at marches, rolling out social programs, and filling a seat.?

?This is an opportunity not to rely on the president, but to rely on their own power and their own organizing to achieve political change.?

? Irene Caselli contributed reporting from Caracas.

Source: http://rss.csmonitor.com/~r/feeds/csm/~3/hZKZTfqtelc/Venezuela-election-Is-a-vote-for-the-opposition-a-vote-against-your-mother

nba trades ign Xbox 720 HTC One NICOLAUS COPERNICUS Las Vegas shooting Jerry Buss

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Three killed in Syrian army gas attack: monitoring group

BEIRUT (Reuters) - A woman and two children were killed and 16 people injured in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on Saturday in what an anti-government violence monitoring group said was a gas attack by Syrian government forces.

Rami Abdelrahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, cited witnesses as saying that two gas bombs had been dropped from an army helicopter.

Doctors in the town of Afrin, where the injured were taken, told the Observatory that victims had "hallucinated, vomited, had excess mucus and felt their eyes were burning".

Reuters cannot verify such reports from Syria due to severe reporting and security restrictions.

A team of United Nations-led experts is waiting in Cyprus for the go-ahead to investigate three previous allegations of chemical weapons attacks in Syria, including one the government said was a poison attack by rebels in Aleppo last month.

The government of President Bashar al-Assad has rejected demands by the opposition that the inspectors be sent to investigate cases in Homs and Damascus where rebels say government forces used chemical munitions.

Aleppo's Sheikh Maqsoud district, where the two bombs were dropped on Saturday, is controlled by rebels. The Observatory distributed photos taken by opposition activists of remnants of what it said were the bombs.

It also sent photos of a dead woman and two children, who it said were both under two years old. None of the three had any visible injuries.

About 70,000 people have been killed in an uprising against four decades of Assad family rule that turned into a civil war after Assad's forces suppressed protests and opposition members took up arms. Both sides have been accused by rights groups of war crimes.

(Reporting by Oliver Holmes; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/three-killed-syrian-army-gas-attack-monitoring-group-114916953.html

iPhone 5 9-11 Chris Brown Tattoo Innocence of Muslims Clara Schumann Jael Strauss Alison Pill