Top Stories Daily Listen Now
RawStory

U.S. News

What to use when the store is out of what you want

Much is uncertain in these uncertain times, and one of those things is the availability of some items at the grocery store.When the coronavirus panic first hit, flour and yeast flew off the shelves like they were toilet paper. Everyone seemed to decide at once that if they were going to be home, they might as well bake some bread.The availability of eggs has been spotty, too, as well as butter. There have been blank spaces in some sections of the produce department. At the beginning of the panic, stores sold out of garlic, which I can’t begin to understand.Flour, yeast, butter and garlic. Was ...

Keep reading... Show less

Bill Barr is about to take the fall for Trump's coronavirus policy: report

According to a report from the Daily Beast, Attorney General Bill Barr appears poised to take the lead and attempt to force governors to re-open their states during the coronavirus pandemic -- even at the risk of ramping up the spread of the virus when it appears to be slowing down.

Keep reading... Show less

Hero healthcare workers stand in street to block right-wing protest against Colorado stay-at-home order

"When they're telling us not to contribute to what they're seeing in the hospital every day, listen."

Keep reading... Show less

A nurse’s hospital wouldn’t let her wear an N95 mask -- she hasn’t been back to work in weeks

On March 31, Florida emergency room nurse Naomi Moya took a big risk. Though her hospital didn’t allow staff to wear N95 masks when treating patients who were not diagnosed with the coronavirus, Moya brought one from home and put it on to protect herself.

Keep reading... Show less

How climate change is putting doctors in the hot seat

BOSTON — A 4-year-old girl was rushed to the emergency room three times in one week for asthma attacks.An elderly man, who’d been holed up in a top-floor apartment with no air conditioning during a heat wave, showed up at a hospital with a temperature of 106 degrees.A 27-year-old man arrived in the ER with trouble breathing ― and learned he had end-stage kidney disease, linked to his time as a sugar cane farmer in the sweltering fields of El Salvador.These patients, whose cases were recounted by doctors, all arrived at Boston-area hospitals in recent years. While the coronavirus pandemic is at...

Keep reading... Show less

San Francisco quick to fight COVID-19, slow to help homeless

San Francisco Mayor London Breed has won nationwide praisefor taking drastic early measures against COVID-19 that seem to have spared San Francisco the catastrophic fate of New York and other cities.But she hesitated over what to do with the city’s estimated 8,000 homeless people during the pandemic — until the issue came back to bite her.A COVID-19 outbreak at the city’s largest homeless shelter had sickened at least 105 people by Friday, about a tenth of the entire San Francisco caseload. It led the city — which had planned to pack the homeless into the Moscone Center, the city’s gigantic co...

Keep reading... Show less

‘It hurts our soul’: Nursing home workers struggle with thankless position

RIVERSIDE, Calif. — In the months before county health officials ordered the evacuation of COVID-19-plagued Magnolia Rehabilitation & Nursing Center, the facility’s employees complained of bounced checks. It sat on a listof the nation’s worst nursing homes for health and safety violations.But when announcing the unprecedented evacuation of Magnolia’s 83 remaining patients last week, Dr. Cameron Kaiser, Riverside County’s health officer, singled out the nursing home’s staff― after only one of its 13 certified nursing assistants showed up for a scheduled shift the previous day.All health care wo...

Keep reading... Show less

Amid pandemic, FDA seizes cheaper drugs from Canada

JUPITER, Fla. — The Food and Drug Administration in the past month has stepped up seizures of prescription drugs being sent to American customers from pharmacies in Canada and other countries, according to operators of stores in Florida that facilitate the transactions.While seizures at the nation’s international mail facilities have periodically spiked during the past two decades, the latest crackdown is distressing many older customers whose goal is to stay home during the coronavirus pandemic.“It’s very aggravating,” said Cabot Jaffe Sr., 83, of Maitland, Florida, who had his asthma drug se...

Keep reading... Show less

We simulated how a modern dust bowl would impact global food supplies and the result is devastating

When the southern Great Plains of the US were blighted with a series of droughts in the 1930s, it had an unparalled impact on the whole country. Combined with decades of ill-advised farming policy, the result was the Dust Bowl. Massive dust storms began in 1931 and devastated the country’s major cereal producing areas. US wheat and maize production crashed by 32% in 1933 and continued to fall for the rest of the decade as more droughts hit.

Keep reading... Show less

Will NASCAR's Coca-Cola 600 go on? NC senators want reopening with no fans in Charlotte

Five Republican state senators from the Charlotte area are calling on North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper to amend his stay-at-home order and partially reopen Charlotte Motor Speedway.They want the NASCAR track in Concord reopened — without fans — for the Coca-Cola 600 on May 24, the weekend of Memorial Day.Cooper’s stay-at-home order, issued on March 27, closed non-essential businesses in North Carolina in response to the coronavirus. NASCAR has suspended its season until further notice although the Associated Press reported Friday that NASCAR has “privately given teams a revised schedule in which...

Keep reading... Show less

‘Nobody calls you back.’ For families, no answers from NJ nursing home where 38 died from coronavirus

Before the news of the mounting death toll at the Andover Subacute and Rehabilitation Center, Amanda Schultz had already been growing increasingly concerned about the Sussex County nursing home caring for her mother.Her mind clouded by the onslaught of Alzheimer’s Disease, 75-year-old Mary Lust initially found refuge at Andover’s Unit 1, a place that Schultz felt was a pleasant facility with a lot of activities for residents.“The staff was always very nice. They would play Bingo. And every Sunday they had church services for the residents,” recalled Schultz.But as her mother continued to deter...

Keep reading... Show less

In time of need, Girl Scout troop finds delicious way to help community -- with cookies

Asked what her favorite Girl Scout badges were, Lilly Williams didn't hesitate.Art journey and the father/daughter dance came quickly to mind.But when asked why she enjoyed being part of her troop, what came out the fourth-grader's mouth was pretty profound for someone so young."I really like the things we get to do for the community," she said.CORONAVIRUS RESOURCES: Live map tracker| Businesses that are open | HomepageBased in Chesterfield (Burlington County), Troop 21348 was founded by Ashley Williams - Lilly's mother - five years ago when the girls were in kindergarten. She's now the co-lea...

Keep reading... Show less

Gas selling for under $1 per gallon in 13 states as national prices plummet during coronavirus quarantines

Gas is selling at drastically reduced prices in the United States as people continue to quarantine themselves indoors due to coronavirus.In a whopping 13 states, gas could be found for less than $1 per gallon as of late last week, according to data released by the travel and navigation app GasBuddy.The states on that list include New York, Michigan, Arkansas, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Ohio, Colorado, Missouri, Iowa, Virginia, Wisconsin, Kansas and Kentucky.The United States as a whole has experienced a precipitous decline in gas prices amid the COVID-19 pandemic, with the national average dipping...

Keep reading... Show less