Extreme heat outside? Your electric vehicle battery could suffer

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:24:44 GMT

Extreme heat outside? Your electric vehicle battery could suffer DALLAS (NewsNation) — With much of the country experiencing scorching heat from Arizona to Texas to Florida, those driving electric vehicles might notice that they aren’t going as far before needing to recharge.New data revealed that electric vehicles can lose up to 20% of their range when it’s 95 degrees or hotter outside.That means if the vehicle normally drives 100 miles, in extreme heat, it can only go 80 miles instead.Some EV drivers said they haven't noticed a change in the way their vehicles run, while others said they definitely can tell the difference and that when it's this hot out, they can't go as far or take as many trips before needing to charge. Recurrent, a website providing battery reports for electric vehicles, studied the batteries of 7,500 EVs and found that when it gets hot, the EV battery starts to lose 15%-30% efficiency. Why does the battery lose efficiency in extreme heat? How to keep your car cooler in the summer heat The vehicle's battery is using up mo...

Several highs above 105°

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:24:44 GMT

Several highs above 105° AUSTIN (KXAN) -- Saturday's high of 106° tied a record first set in 2011. It's the 29th consecutive day and 45th day overall of a triple-digit high.Today's high is, again, forecast to reach 107°. The record high for August 6th is 105° set in 2013. BLOG: Forget the heat: Here's when cooler air usually comes The Excessive Heat Warning runs from noon - 9 p.m. for most of Central Texas with feels-like temperatures as high as 105° to 109°. The Heat Advisory remains in place for Blanco and Gillespie Counties for possible heat index readings up to 111° although the highest heat index in these two counties Saturday got no higher than 105°.Today's heat alertsA Red Flag Warning will be in effect for the entire afternoon and night. Wind speeds are forecast to increase up to 10 to 15 mph later this morning into the afternoon and evening. Relative humidity readings will fall again to the upper teens to low 20s. Yesterday's lowest humidity during the mid- and late-afternoon hours fell to a ran...

Weather update: strong storms expected later today, potential for hail and tornadoes

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:24:44 GMT

Weather update: strong storms expected later today, potential for hail and tornadoes ST. LOUIS -- A few showers and weak storms are impacting the region. These continue to weaken as they move east and shouldn't cause any issues. A few more showers may develop this morning along a warm front lifting north. This front will help to destabilize the atmosphere later today. Afternoon temperatures climb into the upper 80s.We will likely have some strong storms later this afternoon and evening ahead of a rather strong cold front that moves through later today. There are questions as to how the morning activity and lingering cloud cover impact our instability, as well as the timing of the cold front. These factors will impact how far west storms are able to develop. Storm chances are highest from eastern Missouri into Illinois ahead of the front. Storms will gradually expand in coverage and move southeast over the evening hours. Some storms could produce large hail to golf ball size, strong winds to 70 mph, as well as a few tornadoes. The timing we are watching for is after ...

US loses to Sweden on penalty kicks in earliest Women's World Cup exit ever

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:24:44 GMT

US loses to Sweden on penalty kicks in earliest Women's World Cup exit ever MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — The United States played its best game of this Women's World Cup and it's wasn't good enough to stop the two-time reigning champions from being eliminated from the tournament.The Americans' bid to win an unprecedented third consecutive title ended Sunday night on penalty kicks when Lina Hurtig converted and Sweden knocked the United States out of the World Cup 5-4 after a scoreless draw. It is the earliest exit in tournament history for the United States, four-time winners of the World Cup.“Just devastated. It feels like a bad dream,” said captain Alex Morgan. “The team put everything out there tonight, I feel like we dominated, but it doesn't matter. We're going home and it's the highs and lows of the sport of soccer. So, yeah, it doesn't feel great.” U.S. goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher fruitlessly argued she had saved Hurtig's attempt, but it was ruled over the line. The stadium played Abba's “Dancing Queen” in the stadium as the Swedes celebrated. “We just l...

US loses to Sweden on penalty kicks in earliest Women’s World Cup exit ever

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:24:44 GMT

US loses to Sweden on penalty kicks in earliest Women’s World Cup exit ever By ANNE M. PETERSON (AP Sports Writer)MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — The United States played its best game of this Women’s World Cup and it’s wasn’t good enough to stop the two-time reigning champions from being eliminated from the tournament.The Americans’ bid to win an unprecedented third consecutive title ended Sunday night on penalty kicks when Lina Hurtig converted and Sweden knocked the United States out of the World Cup 5-4 after a scoreless draw. It is the earliest exit in tournament history for the United States, four-time winners of the World Cup.“Just devastated. It feels like a bad dream,” said captain Alex Morgan. “The team put everything out there tonight, I feel like we dominated, but it doesn’t matter. We’re going home and it’s the highs and lows of the sport of soccer. So, yeah, it doesn’t feel great.” U.S. goalkeeper Alyssa Naeher fruitlessly argued she had saved Hurtig’s attempt, but...

Colorado cancer centers try to manage chemotherapy drug shortage

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:24:44 GMT

Colorado cancer centers try to manage chemotherapy drug shortage Two workhorse chemotherapy drugs are increasingly hard to come by, and Colorado cancer centers are trying to manage the shortages with as little effect on patients as possible.A May survey of 27 U.S. cancer centers found 25 were short of carboplatin and 19 were short of cisplatin, generic drugs that use the metal platinum to stop cancer cells from growing. About 36% of centers reported that they weren’t able to offer all eligible patients carboplatin promptly and at the optimal dosage.Dr. Leslie Busby, chairman of pharmaceuticals and therapeutics at the US Oncology Network, which manages drugs for Rocky Mountain Cancer Centers’ 19 Colorado locations, said that during the worst point of the cisplatin shortage, they prioritized giving the limited doses to patients with testicular cancer, because it gives them a good chance of being cured.Some people who had other cancers or were unlikely to be cured were switched to carboplatin or another drug, Busby said. That’s in ...

Colorado peaches still ripe for picking, but joys of eating local may vanish

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:24:44 GMT

Colorado peaches still ripe for picking, but joys of eating local may vanish PALISADE – Producing the bright gold peaches long celebrated as Colorado’s most succulent crop increasingly requires imported workers, such as Jose Diaz of Mexico.Eyes gazing intently above a red-white-and-blue bandana for protection against dust, Diaz brings precision for pruning, savvy for selecting fruits at just the right softness, delicacy in twisting each stem ever so slightly as if the peaches were eggs, and the drive to endure 105-degree temperatures.“You have to get used to the heat,” Diaz, 20, said recently during a steamy 11-hour shift, the youngest on a crew of 65 workers from Mexico who launched this year’s harvest.They work largely out of sight in a hazy yellow glow, traipsing through rows upon rows of thickly leafed peach trees, only their scuffed boots visible from outside the orchard. Their easy banter in Spanish, the language of agriculture in the United States, reverberates. They sip from crinkly back-pocket bottles of water. Smartphones switched on li...

Colorado jails are changing how they treat opioid addiction. Will it last?

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:24:44 GMT

Colorado jails are changing how they treat opioid addiction. Will it last? All jails in Colorado are now required to offer the gold-standard opioid treatment to inmates who need it, expanding a proven intervention to one of the front lines of the state’s deadly overdose crisis.At least half of Colorado’s jails were not offering full medication-assisted treatment — the use of medications like methadone plus counseling — before a statutory requirement kicked in on July 1. Amid broader debate about how to handle record-breaking overdoses here, experts have hailed the requirement as among the most consequential policies to come from last year’s controversial fentanyl bill. While several expressed concern about how the state would monitor jails’ compliance in the years to come, the change means a required expansion of treatment for hundreds of the state’s most vulnerable drug users.“You want to save lives? You need MAT in jails,” Rob Valuck, the executive director of the Colorado Consortium for Prescription ...

Bullying? Coercing? Hung juries are rare — so what happened last week in a San Jose courtroom?

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:24:44 GMT

Bullying? Coercing? Hung juries are rare — so what happened last week in a San Jose courtroom? SAN JOSE – Six hours before the federal judge declared a mistrial in the sexual assault trial of San Jose State’s former head athletic trainer, she summoned the exasperated, deadlocked jurors back into the courtroom and urged them to continue deliberating in good faith.Still, she said in that Thursday morning session, if your opinion is sincerely held, don’t change your mind “based solely on pressure from other jurors.”There was pressure, alright.The dragged-out drama behind closed doors inside the Robert F. Peckham Federal Building in downtown San Jose this past week was “extremely unusual,” a national jury expert says. Less than 3% of all federal criminal trials result in hung juries and when they deadlock, jurors are usually closely split.In this San Jose case, however, the eight-woman, four-man jury was 11-1 in favor of guilt on one charge and 10-2 in favor on the remaining five.That the two holdouts in the sexual assault case were both women, and all four men on the jury were c...

5 charts and 1 map that explain how COVID-19 dramatically reshaped the Bay Area commute

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 09:24:44 GMT

5 charts and 1 map that explain how COVID-19 dramatically reshaped the Bay Area commute Here’s how the pandemic radically changed commuting for all of us.Nearly a million Bay Area workers switched to working from home. Commute times dropped by 10 minutes or more in many portions of the Bay Area. Our commuter trains are less than half as crowded as they used to be. But beware: There are signs the congestion on our freeways is creeping back, just at different times and certain days of the week when many of us do choose to head into the office.Here are six big takeaways to help explain what’s happened to the Bay Area commute.Staying home to work is here to stayThe impact from our shift to remote work has been staggering. From 2019 to 2021, the number of Bay Area residents who said they worked from home shot up more than five times, topping 1.1 million.And while updated data from the U.S. Census Bureau isn’t available yet, there’s no sign the remote work revolution ended with the pandemic.The Bay Area Council Economic Institute, an economic policy think t...