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The ongoing national labor shortage did not spare Cape businesses. CAI's Kathryn Eident checks in for a third and final time with Blane Toedt, co-owner of the West End in Hyannis, about how the Labor Day weekend went, and what's ahead this fall.
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Last night, several dozen residents gave the Select Board their input at Town Hall — where officials hosted a poster session, allowing residents to examine mock-ups, feel three sections of railing, and ask questions of the engineering consultants and town officials.
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Saturday marks the 20th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center towers in New York City. CAI's Kathryn Eident talks with a Brewster-based retired Presbyterian minister about his reflections on the attack, the fear, shock and grief it caused, and the two wars that followed.
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In a March 24, 2021, email from General Christopher Faux to staffers for Congressman Bill Keating, the general said the machine gun range could not sustain the scrutiny of a more intensive environmental review, and if such a review were required, the Guard “will most likely lose the project and its funding.”
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It was the ninth tornado recorded on the Cape, according to the National Weather Service, which has records that date back about 60 years. No injuries were reported.
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Federal officials say the rules, which are four years in the making, will reduce the whales’ risk of death and serious injury by 69% — and more protections will be phased in over the next decade as part of a conservation framework.
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The town Select Board called the meeting to allow officials with the Massachusetts Army National Guard and activists with the environmental group 350 Cape Cod to express their opposing points of view on the proposed eight-lane range.
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CAI's Kathryn Eident talks with "Shed" podcast host Eric Adams about the new series exploring racism in the wake of George Floyd's murder in Minneapolis in 2020.
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The tours are filled on a first-come first-serve basis and the tour set for this coming Friday is full, but the Guard will hold them nearly every Friday — except Sept. 3, prior to Labor Day — until Sept. 24. Then officials will evaluate the frequency of the tours depending on demand.
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More than 200 scientists from more than 60 countries worked on the report, which was released Monday by the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). The report, the first major review of its kind since 2013, draws upon more than 14,000 individual studies and is being described as a “code red for humanity.”