An 8-year-old boy turned the youngest individual to complete climbing El Capitan in California’s Yosemite Nationwide Park on Friday, in line with his father, who has been by his aspect and cheering him on because the pair started their journey earlier this week.
Sam Journey Baker achieved the feat Friday night, his father mentioned in a Fb publish.
“What an incredible week! I’m so happy with Sam,” Joe Baker wrote within the publish. “He accomplished the youngest rope ascent of ElCap!”
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The duo have been scaling the rock since Tuesday as a part of a four-person workforce, the place one individual climbs forward of the crew and units the ropes for others to comply with.
Earlier Friday, the pair informed CNN they’d hold a banner on their approach up that claims, “I like you, Mother, nearly there.”
Mountaineering has lengthy been part of the household’s actions – Sam was “in a harness earlier than he might stroll,” his father mentioned, including that his spouse can also be in love with the game.
Sam’s mom, Ann Baker, informed CNN they’ve been supportive of Sam’s adventures.
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“He appears actually completely satisfied to be up there and spirits are excessive,” she mentioned.
After resting in a double sleeping bag, Joe and Sam will put in an eight-mile hike Saturday away from the face of El Capitan, in line with the Fb publish.
“We will probably be in afterglow for days,” Joe mentioned.
El Capitan stands at greater than 3,000 toes from valley floor, in line with the Yosemite Nationwide Park web site.
And all through the four-day climb, Joe anticipated his son would cry “as a result of it’s onerous. It’s emotional, however he has been so powerful and labored by way of all of it.”
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Sam’s bravery is hardly a shock. The younger boy has been coaching tackle the historic feat for at the very least 18 months, his father mentioned. The pair had additionally climbed Moonlight Buttress in Utah’s Zion Nationwide Park, which reassured his father that Sam was prepared for El Capitan.
“He did terrific on it and actually confirmed us that he might deal with the publicity,” Joe mentioned.
Lynn McIntyre is supposed to feel like one of the lucky ones. When a series of wildfires devastated Los Angeles in January, her Pacific Palisades home was among those inexplicably spared. But with every single home around her burned to the ground, McIntyre calls herself something different: “one of the left behinds.”
“I don’t feel as lucky as people think,” she said. “Because I don’t have the same set of issues that all of my neighbors have. They’re cut and dried.”
Cut and dried, she says, because their homes are total losses in the eyes of insurance companies. They don’t have to figure out how to clean up a home that’s standing in a sea of toxic ash, soot and debris, the remnants of all the synthetic stuff that makes up modern life – appliances, clothing and carpets — after it all burned at high heat.
“There’s no guidelines for what you should be looking for. There’s no guidelines telling you who to call or regulate testing,” she said. “It’s a Wild West out there with the testing, with the remediation companies. People are just grasping at straws with no guidance from government.”
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Tests, which McIntyre says she spent more than $5,000 of her own money on, showed arsenic was present inside her home as well as lead levels 22 times higher than what’s considered safe by the EPA.
Lynn McIntyre
60 Minutes
Still, McIntyre’s insurer has told her it will not cover the cost of cleaning up her home because it does not constitute a “direct physical loss.” She also won’t get help from the agencies tasked by the Federal Emergency Management Agency with cleaning up from the fires – the Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
The first phase of cleaning up Los Angeles
The EPA started its portion of the cleanup, known as Phase 1, first by removing all the hazardous waste – things like propane tanks, cleaning supplies and paint cans – and combing the burn zones for electric vehicles, the newest challenge when cleaning up after an urban fire.
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Electric vehicles are powered by lithium-ion batteries, which can explode, emit toxic gasses or re-ignite even weeks or months after they’ve been damaged. Just one electric vehicle contains thousands of those batteries. Chris Myers, who leads the EPA’s Lithium-Ion Battery Emergency Response team, said leaving those “uncontrolled out in the field” poses a danger to the public.
“They are delicate, they are fragile, they’re unstable,” he explained. “In the public, access is very, very dangerous for anyone who is onsite, right, not just our workers, but the public at large.”
EPA teams found about 600 electric vehicles, most of them in McIntyre’s Palisades neighborhood.
But just identifying incinerated electric vehicles has been a challenge, according to Myers. So, the EPA conducted reconnaissance, sending dozens of teams across Altadena and the Pacific Palisades, searching for the skeletons of electric vehicles in the debris and calling power companies and manufacturers to locate the power walls, which were often attached to homes, to charge them.
Battery cells from charred electric vehicles are placed in steel drums and plunged into a saltwater solution.
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60 Minutes
The instability of these damaged batteries means extracting them from a single electric vehicle can take a six-person team up to two hours. It’s a delicate surgery performed with heavy machinery. First, the top of the car is sawed off and then flipped over, exposing the battery underneath. The thousands of cells that make up the battery are scooped out and placed into steel drums which are transported to a temporary processing site. Once at the processing site they’re plunged into a saltwater solution for three days, a process that allows any trapped energy in the battery to dissipate, making them far less likely to reignite. Lastly, the batteries are shoveled onto a tarp and steamrolled, ensuring that what’s left, according to Myers, can no longer be considered a battery.
Handling California’s hazardous waste
So where does all that battery waste end up? 60 Minutes found the answer 600 miles away.
Despite no longer being considered “batteries,” what’s left is still technically considered a hazardous material under California’s strict environmental regulations. We learned that this battery waste was being trucked hundreds of miles away to a hazardous waste landfill – in Utah.
For years, the state of California has struggled to keep up with the amount of hazardous waste it generates. California only has two operating landfills certified to take hazardous materials and, even before the fires, those two sites couldn’t hold all of the state’s hazardous waste. Instead about half of it is trucked hundreds of miles away to nearby states, mostly Utah and Arizona, which rely on more lenient federal waste standards.
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Removing billions of pounds of debris
After the EPA finished clearing more than 9,000 properties of hazardous debris and while that battery waste was still being hauled out of state, the second phase of the cleanup was getting underway. The second phase involves removing all the rest of the debris – about nine billion pounds’ worth – including everything from concrete foundations to furniture and contaminated soil.
This phase is being overseen by the U.S. Army Corps Engineers under the leadership of Col. Eric Swenson, who anticipates their work will be done by the first anniversary of the fires.
Col. Eric Swenson
60 Minutes
It’s a task that’s being carried out parcel by parcel, dump truck by dump truck. Swenson said the time it takes to clear one property can take up to 10 days depending on the complexity of the structure and the terrain it sits on.
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“If we have a house that’s pinned on the side of a mountain, pinned on the side of a coastline, those properties could take us six, eight, 10 days to do, because we’re gonna need some specialized equipment to get in there,” Swenson said.
The Army Corps and its cavalry of dump trucks is also responsible for removing six inches of topsoil from the charred properties once the debris is cleared. Swenson’s confident six inches is enough to make the soil safe again and worries that further excavation makes it difficult for homeowners to rebuild.
“All we’re doing is economically disadvantaging that owner, and delaying their ability to rebuild, ’cause now they’re gonna have to replace all of that soil we excavated– from– from that property,” Swenson said.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom doesn’t think removing six inches of soil is enough. His office asked FEMA, which determines the scope of work for the Army Corps, to test the remaining soil for toxic contaminants as it’s done after previous wildfires. FEMA says the agency changed its approach to soil testing in 2020 because it found that contamination deeper than six inches was typically pre-existing and not necessary for public health protection.
The long road home
But residents like Matthew Craig, who lived in Altadena, aren’t eligible for help from the Army Corps or EPA cleanup crews. Craig’s home, like Lynn McIntyre’s, is still standing, but the strong winds that fueled the wildfires pushed smoke and soot inside, leaving a fine layer of ash on everything. It’s that ash that worries him.
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Matthew Craig shows Sharyn Alfonsi the inside of his home, which was left standing after California wildfires.
60 Minutes
“The house is filled with the ashes of thousands of homes that are hundreds of years old,” he said. “These houses are filled with asbestos. They’re filled with lead.”
Craig’s insurance company has agreed to test the inside of his home for toxins and he’s waiting to hear whether they’ll cover his clean up costs. Until testing can show that his home is safe, Craig says that he, his wife and young son won’t return.
McIntyre shares Craig’s concerns. She signed an 18-month lease on an apartment out of town, anticipating the road home for her, and her neighbors, will be a long one.
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Sharyn Alfonsi
Sharyn Alfonsi is an award-winning correspondent for 60 Minutes.
Californiians could soon be voting on a new healthcare law named after Luigi Mangione, the Ivy League grad who is accused of executing the CEO of UnitedHealthcare in cold blood.
The “Luigi Mangione Access to Health Care Act,” was put forward by retired Los Angeles attorney Paul Eisner, who said the sick stunt was necessary to get publicity for his proposal.
Luigi Mangione appears in a New York City court on Feb. 21, 2025. AP
The proposed ballot measure would make it illegal for an insurance company to “delay, deny or modify any medical procedure or medication” recommended by a doctor if there could be serious consequences including “disability, death, amputation, permanent disfigurement, loss or reduction of any bodily function,” according to the document filed to the California Attorney General’s Office.
Tthe terms “delay” and “deny” were written on the bullet casings that were found at the Midtown Manhattan scene where health insurance exec Brian Thompson was gunned down last December.
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They were believed to be inspired by the book “Delay, Deny, Defend: Why Insurance Companies Don’t Pay Claims and What You Can Do About It.”
While the naming has drawn swift criticism, Eisner defended invoking Mangione’s name, telling CBS 8, “For a very simple reason: it is getting the attention it needs, because sometimes things require publicity.”
Protesters rally outside Manhattan Criminal Court in support of Luigi Mangione against health care. Katie Godowski/MediaPunch/Shutterstock
“People are tired of carriers, of insurance companies denying them health care,” he added.
Eisner, who maintains that he supports Mangione’s goals — just not his use of violence.
“I agree with what he was arguing, but I don’t support his method. What I am doing is the right way to do it,” Eisner said.
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Commentators online were quick to slam the proposal for using the name of an accused killer.
Luigi Mangione is escorted by police after arriving in New York following his arrest on Dec. 19, 2024. Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images
“THE LUIGI MANGIONI ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE ACT” Seriously???? A ballot initiative about health care submitted today to the California Attorney General is named after the accused killer. Crazy,” journalist Gerald Posner wrote on X.
“I’m starting to suspect the Democrats in charge of California might actually just be simple road side lunatics after all,” added podcast produer Leigh Wolf.
The new measure would allow patients to sue insurers and potentially receive attorney fees and triple damages if successful, according to the outlet.
Supporters display shirts depicting Luigi Mangione in positive poses. Katie Godowski/MediaPunch/ShutterstockUnited Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson was fatally shot outside a Midtown Manhattan hotel on Dec. 4, 2024. AP
The public comment period for the proposed measure ends on April 25. After, the Attorney General’s office will review the initiative and craft its official title.
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The measure must gather over 546,000 valid signatures from registered California voters to be included on the November 2026 ballot.
Mangione is currently charged with murder by both New York and the federal courts. He has pleaded not guilty.
Depite the brutal crimes Mangione is accused of, he has inspired a legion of adoring fans who have raised money for his legal defense fund, innundated him with fawning fan mail and even threatened witnesses in the case.
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KGO) — Bay Area Assemblymember Buffy Wicks lead a group of state lawmakers in Sacramento Thursday.
Wicks bringing forward a legislative package of 22 different bills, all aimed at fixing California’s housing crisis by reducing bureaucratic red tape.
“Housing is the number one expense in almost every single household in California. And lack of housing affordability affects every other aspect of our society,” Wicks said.
The bill package specifically looks to overhaul the entire permitting process for new housing, from the application to the actual construction.
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It’s gotten support from many local housing organizations.
That includes the Housing Action Coalition, that says the amount of time it takes to get projects moving wastes millions of dollars.
“When you’re dealing with the uncertainty of timelines that it will take to actually get permits, that unnecessary delay causing a lot of extra costs,” said the Coalition’s Ali Sapirman.
The package also seeking to address delays due to environmental lawsuits.
One part of the bill would exempt construction in already built-up urban areas from these lawsuits.
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In the past there has been some opposition to bills such as this, especially from environmental groups.
MORE: Why SF housing construction is still slow after permitting process loosened
The timeline for going through San Francisco’s planning and permitting process has loosened, but here’s why housing isn’t being built quicker.
However, with this bill, some groups say it’ll actually benefit the local environment.
Jordan Grimes works with Green Belt Alliance, a Bay Area-based environmental nonprofit.
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“The standard for environmental review should be different for an oil derrick than it is for an affordable housing project. And that isn’t the case right now,” Grimes said.
Grimes says while he understands the concerns some environmental groups have regarding housing, he believes leaving things the way they are now will actually cause more ecological harm.
He tells us that due to California’s building regulations, the state has continued to expand outward over the past 75 years- pushing people to live in areas more prone to natural disasters and reliant on car use.
Grimes thinks building denser housing closer to major cities would actually reduce pollution over the long term.
“We need to fundamentally rethink how and where we live as a state. And permitting reform really gets at exactly that,” he said.
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Wicks believes, if passed, the bill package would be one of the most comprehensive overhauls to California’s housing rules in years.