Published: Wednesday, April 14, 2021
Collage of Interior, Energy, EPA and Transportation nominees.
President Biden announced Interior, Energy, EPA and Transportation nominees. Pictured clockwise from top left: Radhika Fox, Faisal Amin, Shannon Estenoz, Tommy Beaudreau, Michal Ilana Freedhoff, Jill Hruby, Christopher Coes, Meera Joshi and Winnie Stachelberg. Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call/Newscom; RW Institute; U.S. Endowment; Columbia University, Freedhoff, Nuclear Threat Initiative; Coes/LinkedIn; Department of Transportation; Center for American Progress
The Biden administration today reinforced its environmental roster, announcing a slew of EPA and Interior, Energy and Transportation department nominees.
In one of the highest-profile moves, the White House said energy attorney Tommy Beaudreau will be nominated to serve as deputy Interior secretary, adding both agency management savvy and some potential pragmatic appeal to key Senate centrists.
Hit-and-run driver in Florida kills federal judge, hits boy, claims she’s Harry Potter: police
Updated 9:27 PM;
The child’s condition is unknown.
Operating the vehicle was Nastasia Snape, 23, of North Lauderdale, police reports say.
At least three witnesses told cops that Snape was driving erratically as she made her way northbound on Ocean Boulevard. At NW 40th Street, Snape swerved onto the sidewalk, striking Sandra Feuerstein, 75, the report says.
Snape sped on, striking the boy as he made his way across the crosswalk, according to the report.
She didn’t stop until she reached Delray Beach, where officers found her unconscious inside her vehicle, which had crashed at an intersection, arrest documents state.
According to police, a driver struck and killed a New York federal judge in Boca Raton on Friday. The driver then drove away and hit a 6-year-old boy. She went on to crash her car in Delray Beach and told paramedics she was "Harry Potter," cops say.
CONTENT: Press Release
BELLEVUE, Wash., April 8, 2021 /3BL Media/ Rural America, get ready for your closeup. Yesterday, in an event webcast to the world, T-Mobile (NASDAQ: TMUS) detailed the Magenta wave coming to small town U.S.A. That wave includes an upgrade to 5G phones and plans, a new home broadband option for 10 million rural households T-Mobile Home Internet and a commitment to build hundreds of new stores and create 7,500 new jobs supporting the wireless needs of communities all across rural America.
Today, the Un-carrier narrows its focus to just one town: introducing the T-Mobile Hometown Techover, a contest to find a single town in America that can showcase the power of the T-Mobile 5G network, that can be the 5G model for all other cities, towns, hamlets, burgs, parishes, villages or other similarly named community. And entering is as easy as taking a selfie.