Northeast
Columbia University: 'No choice' but to call NYPD, building occupation believed to be led by outside agitators
Columbia University says it “regrets” having to call in the New York Police Department to clear out anti-Israel protesters Tuesday night, but they were left with “no choice.”
University administrators released a statement saying it was their belief that non-student agitators led the push to break into and occupy Hamilton Hall. The university then called on the NYPD to take action.
“We regret that protesters have chosen to escalate the situation through their actions. After the University learned overnight that Hamilton Hall had been occupied, vandalized, and blockaded, we were left with no choice,” administrators said in a statement. “Columbia public safety personnel were forced out of the building, and a member of our facilities team was threatened. We will not risk the safety of our community or the potential for further escalation.”
“The leadership team, including the Board of Trustees, met throughout the night and into the early morning, consulting with security experts and law enforcement to determine the best plan to protect our students and the entire Columbia community. We made the decision, early in the morning, that this was a law enforcement matter, and that the NYPD were best positioned to determine and execute an appropriate response,” the statement added.
VIDEO SHOWS ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTERS BLOCK JEWISH STUDENT FROM GETTING TO CLASS; UCLA RESPONDS
New York Police Department officers enter the Columbia University building and detain anti-Israel demonstrators as they had barricaded themselves to iconic Hamilton Hall building in New York, United States.
The university added that they believe the group that broke into the building was “led by individuals who are not affiliated with the University.”
Administrators lamented the breakdown of communications between the school and protesters. Columbia officials had held a dialogue with protesters last week, which ended in an impasse.
CALIFORNIA UNIVERSITY REVEALS ‘TRUE COST’ OF ANTI-ISRAEL MOB THAT TOOK OVER ACADEMIC BUILDINGS
“The decision to reach out to the NYPD was in response to the actions of the protesters, not the cause they are championing. We have made it clear that the life of campus cannot be endlessly interrupted by protesters who violate the rules and the law,” the school said.
Columbia University and student protesters. (Getty Images)
“Early Tuesday, protesters chose to escalate to an alarming and untenable situation – including by vandalizing property, breaking doors and windows, blockading entrances, and forcing our facilities and public safety workers out – and we are responding appropriately as we have long made clear we would. The safety of our community, especially our students, remains our top priority,” the statement said.
VIDEO SHOWS ANTI-ISRAEL PROTESTERS BLOCK JEWISH STUDENT FROM GETTING TO CLASS; UCLA RESPONDS
NYPD officers in riot gear break into a building at Columbia University, where anti-Israel students were barricaded inside a building and set up an encampment, in New York City. (KENA BETANCUR/AFP via Getty Images)
The protests at Columbia are just one example of anti-Israel demonstrations taking place at campuses across the country. Police were also called in to disband an encampment at the University of California at Los Angeles late Tuesday.
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Maine
MaineHealth Maine Medical conference highlights trauma care challenges
PORTLAND, Maine (WGME) — Maine’s healthcare workers are discussing solutions to the many challenges of providing high-quality trauma care.
On Friday, medical leaders met at MaineHealth Maine Medical Center Portland to discuss Maine’s trauma care system and how they can take steps to improve it.
Officials say rural communities are feeling the effects of hospital and especially trauma center closures.
Right now, there are only two trauma centers in the state of Maine.
Dr. Bryan Morse, the medical director of trauma at MaineHealth Maine Medical Center in Portland, says providers often struggle with finding transportation and pediatric support for patients in trauma situations.
“We have challenges that have come about relating to transporting patients across the system and across the state. There has also been challenges with pediatric patients and how to best optimize their outcomes as well,” Dr. Morse said. “The care of trauma in the state of Maine right now is really under distress.”
Morse says he hopes with conferences like Friday’s, Maine can improve their trauma response care.
Massachusetts
Public asked to attend funeral services for Massachusetts World War II veteran with no known family
An effort is underway in Massachusetts to give a World War II veteran the goodbye he deserves.
John Bernard Arnold III, an East Bridgewater man who served in the U.S. Navy, died on May 6 at 98 years old.
“This veteran passed away with no known family to attend his services,” the town said. “Attendees, pallbearers, and procession participants are all needed.”
Terrence O’Keeffe, who is the veterans’ service officer for Hanson and Hanover, posted to Facebook on Thursday that he’s looking for people to show up for Arnold in Hanson on Monday.
“I am enlisting your help to send this Veteran off the way he should,” O’Keeffe wrote.
His post has been shared hundreds of times, and he has since updated it to say “the response to this has been more than amazing.”
“This is exactly how our community (not just the Veterans) should come together,” O’Keeffe said. “It’s shaping up to be a fitting send off.”
Visitation will be from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. Monday at Saint Joseph the Worker Church on Maquan Street in Hanson. A funeral Mass will follow at 11 a.m. Arnold will be laid to rest after at Cedar Knoll Cemetery in Taunton.
One person on Facebook who said she has been a caretaker for Arnold at a veteran home in East Bridgewater commented that he always made everyone’s day “bright and happy.”
“He sadly has no family and was the sweetest littlest 98 year old man I ever had the pleasure to know,” she said.
An obituary for Arnold says he had two sisters who died before him. He went to high school in Newport, Rhode Island and attended Rhode Island State University for two years. He also had lived in Pembroke, Massachusetts.
New Hampshire
EPA, environmental advocates face off over PFAS in Manchester’s wastewater treatment plant
Lawyers for the Conservation Law Foundation argued before a federal environmental appeals board Thursday that the Environmental Protection Agency had not done its due diligence when creating a new permit for Manchester’s wastewater treatment facility.
Thursday’s oral arguments were the culmination of a months-long battle between environmental advocates, federal regulators, and city officials over what, if anything, should be done to protect the Merrimack River and people who live nearby from harmful chemicals coming out of the plant.
PFAS chemicals, also known as “forever chemicals,” are widely present in the environment and in the waste stream. Wastewater treatment processes don’t add PFAS to water, but they collect and transform those chemicals, putting them back out into the environment. A 2019 study found PFAS concentrations above federal drinking water standards being discharged from Manchester’s wastewater plant, and other studies found PFAS chemicals in fish from the Merrimack river.
The permit approved by the EPA requires the city of Manchester to monitor for PFAS chemicals in the wastewater entering their treatment plant, but it doesn’t put a limit on the levels of PFAS that can be in the water leaving the plant.
Lawyers with the Conservation Law Foundation argue the Environmental Protection Agency did not fulfill their duty to analyze whether the PFAS chemicals coming out of Manchester’s wastewater treatment plant could potentially harm the Merrimack River.
Jillian Aicher, a staff attorney with the Conservation Law Foundation, said that kind of analysis would be the first step to creating requirements to reduce the discharge of those chemicals.
“This appeal has very important implications for community members in Manchester, who are exposed to uncontrolled PFAS coming from their wastewater treatment plant with no reduction measures. And importantly here, no consideration by EPA of reduction measures,” she said.
Lawyers for the EPA argued the agency did consider the potential of effluent from the treatment facility to harm water quality. Federal regulators reviewed and agreed with an analysis done by New Hampshire state officials, they said.
In 2021, the EPA adopted a PFAS roadmap that includes restricting how much PFAS industrial facilities can discharge, and using the permitting process for wastewater facilities to reduce those chemicals in waterways.
Across the country, states have begun working to research and regulate PFAS in the waste stream. But the PFAS analysis that the Conservation Law Foundation is asking regulators to conduct for the Manchester plant is not common, said Tom Irwin, a vice president at the foundation.
He said Manchester would be an important place to start. The wastewater treatment facility, which is near some residential areas, burns its sewage sludge.
“People are being exposed to PFAS in the air, PFAS are being discharged into the water,” he said. “If the regulators take this on the way they should, this will provide a pathway for others.”
Environmental justice
The Conservation Law Foundation also argued the EPA abandoned environmental justice considerations during the permitting process without a thorough explanation.
Irwin told the Environmental Appeals Board that the agency’s reliance on executive orders that revoked Biden-era environmental justice policy was not enough, and that the policy change required more explanation.
“There is a growing body of case law that reaffirms that agencies can’t just change policy without analyzing why they’re doing so,” Irwin said in an interview with NHPR. “There’s no document from the Trump administration explaining why suddenly we don’t have to take into consideration communities that are overburdened by pollution and other health impacts.”
Lawyers for the EPA said the agency is allowed to use their discretion on environmental justice issues, and argued they did provide reasons for not considering environmental justice while they were drafting the permit.
Adam Dunville, a lawyer for the city of Manchester, also participated in the oral arguments in support of the EPA’s position. Officials with the city’s wastewater treatment plant staff did not respond to requests for comment.
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