SARATOGA SPRINGS, N. Y. The Transgender Day of Remembrance seeks to honor the memory of transgender and nonbinary individuals who were lost in 2025, either to homicide or to suicide. People in the Capital Region recently gathered to pay their respects and pay tribute to the individuals who died too soon. During the ceremony, members of the transgender/nonbinary community read the 64 names of those who died, followed by a call and response portion. Rauch Passaro was one of the individuals who participated, sharing that they felt very heartened to see a ceremony like this take place in their community. “Especially in years where we’re affected by the loss in our own community, it really hits home, so I am so grateful to be able to have everyone come together and see the community support for this year after year,” Passaro said. “These times are undeniably scary it’s contentious, but it’s events like this that really underline how these are the things that bind us. In life, across the board, everyone has something that they can relate to each other on. “I hope those who attend leave with just a little more thoughtfulness, a little more patience and a desire to understand each other and stay connected to people and to find things that lift us all up.” Attendees were able to take part in a candlelight vigil and listen to readings from Rabbi Illana Symons of Temple Sinai and Rev. Jo Urrriola-Shonewolf of Saratoga United Methodist Church, as well as musical performances of “Whisper” and“Take Me Down to the Water’s Edge” by Trace Ellis. The ceremony, which took place in the Wyckoff Center on the Skidmore College campus, was put together in partnership between Saratoga Pride and Skidmore College. Mariel Martin, director of the Wyckoff Center, shared with the Saratogian ahead of the ceremony not only how fitting a location it was to hold such a ceremony, but how proud she was to be a part of this annual remembrance. “The Wyckoff Center is a space for cross-cultural communication, community engagement, connection across identity, culture across difference and so really it is a space to affirm all members of our community, so it feels like a really fitting space to have it,” Mariel Martin, director of the Wyckoff Center, shared ahead of the ceremony. “Skidmore College does not exist in isolation, we are connected to the wider Saratoga community and creating really intentional spaces where we invite in members of the community . especially in this space and on our campus and in our wider Saratoga community, I think it’s so important to hold space for everybody who lives, works, learns and is part of this community and really uplifting and affirming them in all of their identities. “Creating a space to say you’re seen and you’re validated in all that you bring to our community, because you’re part of us too.” The Transgender Day of Remembrance has been observed internationally on Nov. 20 since 1999, with a local event taking place in Saratoga Springs for the last six years. Cindy Swadba, a volunteer with Saratoga Pride, shared that the organization was challenged by a former speaker they had at one of their events to host a Transgender Day of Remembrance ceremony, and it has been something the organization has committed to doing annually in the years since. “This is a memorial, and it’s also an educational opportunity. We’re talking about what it means to be transgender, the speakers today, with a couple of exceptions, are all transgender and from the local area,” Swaba said. “It’s a very solemn event, and we speak about the transgender and non-binary members of our community, and those who’ve lost their lives to violence or suicide. “We gather in this place to do that, to remember and to lift our transgender members of this community to show them that we care that we’re here.” Swaba added that she hopes attendees of the ceremony feel inclined to share their experience with other people in their lives, just let those they know how meaningful it was and let them know that they stood by the transgender, non-binary community. “I hope they take away a new understanding and a new peace to be at peace with themselves and certainly with others.” For more information about The Transgender Day of Remembrance and to see the list of names read, visit.
https://www.saratogian.com/2025/11/22/lift-us-all-up-lives-lost-honored-at-transgender-day-of-remembrance/
Category Archives: general
Trump promete fin “de inmediato” a TPS para somalíes en Minnesota, desatando temor y dudas legales
Por JAKE OFFENHARTZ La promesa del presidente Donald Trump de poner fin a las protecciones legales temporales para los somalíes que viven en Minnesota ha desatado una ola de temor en una comunidad inmigrante sumamente arraigada en el estado, así como dudas sobre si la Casa Blanca tiene la autoridad legal para promulgar la directiva tal como se describe. El mandatario publicó la noche del viernes en su plataforma de redes sociales Truth Social que a los residentes somalíes de Minnesota se les retiraría “de inmediato” el Estatus de Protección Temporal (TPS por sus iniciales en inglés), una salvaguarda legal contra la deportación para inmigrantes de ciertos países. El anuncio provocó una respuesta inmediata de algunos líderes estatales y expertos en inmigración, quienes se refirieron a las amenazas de Trump como un intento sin muchos fundamentos legales para sembrar miedo y sospecha hacia la comunidad somalí de Minnesota, la más grande del país. “No hay un mecanismo legal que le permita al presidente poner fin al estatus de protección para una comunidad o estado en particular con el que tenga problemas”, aseguró Heidi Altman, directora de políticas del National Immigrant Justice Center. “Trump está haciendo lo que siempre hace: demagogia contra los inmigrantes sin justificación ni evidencia y usar esa demagogia en un intento por retirar importantes protecciones que salvan vidas”, agregó. La protección para los somalíes ha sido extendida 27 veces desde 1991, después de que las autoridades estadounidenses han determinado que las condiciones en Somalia no son lo suficientemente seguras para que las personas que ya se encuentran en Estados Unidos puedan regresar a ese país. Sin embargo, el gobierno de Trump podría tomar medidas para retirar las protecciones legales para los somalíes a nivel nacional. Pero eso afectaría sólo a una pequeña fracción de las decenas de miles de somalíes que viven en Minnesota. Según un informe elaborado para el Congreso en agosto pasado, únicamente hay 705 somalíes al amparo del TPS a nivel nacional “Soy ciudadana, al igual que la mayoría de los somalíes en Estados Unidos”, señaló la representante por Minnesota Ilhan Omar, una demócrata de origen somalí. “Buena suerte celebrando un cambio de política que realmente no tiene mucho impacto en los somalíes a los que amas odiar”. Aún así, grupos activistas advirtieron que la medida podría avivar el odio contra una comunidad en un momento de creciente islamofobia. “Esto no es sólo un cambio burocrático”, dijo Jaylani Hussein, presidente del Council on American-Islamic Relations para su oficina en Minnesota. “Es un ataque político a la comunidad somalí y musulmana impulsado por una retórica islamofóbica y de odio”. En su publicación en redes sociales, Trump afirmó, sin ofrecer evidencia, que las pandillas somalíes han atacado a los residentes de Minnesota y se refirió al estado como un “centro de actividad fraudulenta para el lavado de dinero”. Fiscales federales han presentado cargos en las últimas semanas contra decenas de personas que forman parte de un plan de fraude de servicios sociales. Algunos de los acusados son originarios de Somalia. El gobernador de Minnesota, el demócrata Tim Walz, ha señalado que su estado se ubica consistentemente entre los más seguros del país. “No es de sorprender que el presidente haya elegido atacar de manera generalizada a toda una comunidad”, señaló Waltz el viernes. “Esto es lo que hace para cambiar de tema”. Activistas comunitarios destacan que la diáspora somalí en Minnesota ha ayudado a revitalizar los corredores del centro de Minneapolis y juega un importante papel en la política del estado. “La verdad es que la comunidad somalí es querida y está profundamente entrelazada en muchos de los vecindarios y comunidades de Minnesota”, subrayó Altman. “Desestabilizar a familias y comunidades nos deja a todos menos seguros, no más”. Como parte de un impulso más amplio por adoptar políticas de inmigración más estrictas, la Casa Blanca ha tomado medidas para retirar varias protecciones que les habían permitido a los inmigrantes permanecer en Estados Unidos y trabajar legalmente. Entre ellas se incluye el fin del TPS para 600. 000 venezolanos y 500. 000 haitianos que recibieron protecciones durante la presidencia de Joe Biden. ___ Esta historia fue traducida del inglés por un editor de AP con la ayuda de una herramienta de inteligencia artificial generativa.
https://www.mcall.com/2025/11/22/trump-promete-fin-de-inmediato-a-tps-para-somales-en-minnesota-desatando-temor-y-dudas-legales/
49ers and Brandon Aiyuk Reportedly Headed Toward Stunning Split
The San Francisco 49ers and star wide receiver Brandon Aiyuk have had a pretty tumultuous relationship ever since the All-Pro’s memorable “hold-in” during a very public, ongoing contract dispute in the Summer of 2024. Specifically, the relationship of note more or less begins and ends with 49ers General Manager John Lynch and head coach Kyle Shanahan, a notably successful duo that came in together with the storied franchise in 2017, and are essentially locked at the hip. Unfortunately, at least for fans of the team, based on a rather shocking report dropped by The Athletic, it appears Aiyuk is a near lock to be released by the team at season’s end. In the span of just 15 months since Aiyuk signed an enormous, four-year, $120 million extension, including $76 million in guaranteed money, the vibes are hardly “Can’t spell The Bay without BA” these days. “It now appears that Aiyuk and the 49ers are headed for a stunning divorce,” the report began. “Aiyuk, who suffered a season-ending knee injury last October, was placed on the physically unable to perform list in July and has yet to be activated. It’s now likely that he has played his last game with the [49ers] franchise, according to numerous sources briefed on the matter, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.” But it gets even more complicated from there, or perhaps less complicated given what’s apparently transpired between Aiyuk and the 49ers over these past few months. “Aiyuk, sources say, has failed to attend meetings and declined to participate in other team activities in recent months, and the 49ers have grown increasingly frustrated with the receiver’s lack of communication,” the lengthy dispatch from The Athletic continued. “The 49ers responded by voiding the guaranteed money in Aiyuk’s contract for 2026, asserting that the absences amounted to a failure to fulfill his contractual obligations. That would clear the way for his expected release at season’s end. The idea that a talent like Aiyuk might not be making his return at all this season already served as a huge blow to the 49ers offense. But based on the report and all the background music within it, the reality that this might already be the end for No. 11 in a 49ers uniform-based on social media alone-has fans of the Niners in a state of reflection, while fans of other NFL teams are jumping for joy in the hopes of landing the proven, talented wide receiver. The report also referenced that there are still some individuals within the 49ers organization who are still “holding out hope that the relationship can be salvaged enough for him to return this season.” But given the current circumstances of the apparent deeply fractured player-team relationship, along with the delicate recovery time given that Aiyuk suffered a torn ACL/MCL/meniscus just over a year ago, it seems like a return to the field in 2025 would be unlikely at this point.
https://www.complex.com/sports/a/tim-ryan/49ers-releasing-brandon-aiyuk-report-voided-contract-money
Chicago MMA fighter dies after competition at Cicero Stadium, officials say
CICERO, Ill. (WLS) — A Chicago MMA fighter died after a competition Friday night at a suburban stadium, officials said. The death happened at Cicero Stadium, 1909 S. Laramie Ave. in Cicero, according to the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office. ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch Isaac Johnson, 31, died at the location, officials said. His cause of death has not been revealed. A spokesperson for the town of Cicero confirmed that an ambulance took an injured fighter to Loyola University Medical Center around 8: 38 p. m. Friday and he was pronounced dead Saturday morning. The deceased fighter was identified as Johnson, who lived in Chicago. Promotions for the Matador Fighter Challenge Friday night at Cicero Stadium showed Isaac Johnson in a heavyweight Thai matchup. A fight promoter posted a message to social media Saturday, saying Johnson collapsed at the end of his fight Friday. Cicero police are investigating. No further information was immediately available.
https://abc7chicago.com/post/chicago-mma-fighter-isaac-johnson-dies-matador-challenge-competition-cicero-stadium-officials-say/18192077/
ALGO Price Prediction: $0.19 Target by December 2025 Despite Current Bearish Momentum
ALGO Price Prediction Summary • ALGO short-term target indicating extreme oversold conditions that often precede reversals. The RSI reading of 30. 59 provides the most compelling signal for our ALGO price prediction. While not yet in oversold territory (below 30), this level historically marks accumulation zones for Algorand. The momentum indicators paint a mixed picture the MACD histogram at -0. 0026 suggests bearish momentum is weakening, while the Stochastic readings (%K: 6. 18, %D: 7. 00) indicate severely oversold conditions. Volume analysis from Binance shows $4. 2 million in 24-hour trading, which remains relatively subdued compared to previous breakout periods. This low volume environment suggests that any decisive move above $0. 15 (SMA 7) could trigger significant buying interest. The moving average structure tells a clear story of the downtrend’s severity. ALGO trades 38% below its 200-day SMA ($0. 21) and 19% below the 20-day SMA ($0. 16), indicating the depth of the current correction from the 52-week high of $0. 32. Algorand Price Targets: Bull and Bear Scenarios Bullish Case for ALGO The optimistic Algorand forecast scenario targets a move toward $0. 19-$0. 23 by year-end 2025. This projection aligns with analyst consensus and requires ALGO to break above several key resistance levels. The first ALGO price target sits at $0. 15 (SMA 7), where a successful break would signal the beginning of trend reversal. Following this, $0. 16 (SMA 20) represents the critical resistance that has repeatedly rejected previous recovery attempts. A sustained move above $0. 16 opens the path to $0. 19 (upper Bollinger Band), where significant selling pressure is expected. The ultimate bullish target of $0. 23 (strong resistance) would represent a 77% gain from current levels and validate the most optimistic analyst predictions. For this bullish scenario to unfold, ALGO needs increasing volume above $6 million daily, RSI moving above 50, and MACD turning positive. The cryptocurrency’s correlation with broader market sentiment also plays a crucial role in achieving these targets. Bearish Risk for Algorand The bearish case for our ALGO price prediction centers on a break below the current $0. 13 support level. This scenario would invalidate the oversold bounce thesis and potentially trigger algorithmic selling. Immediate downside targets include $0. 10 (strong support), representing a 23% decline from current levels. This level coincides with significant psychological support and previous accumulation zones. A breakdown below $0. 10 would be catastrophic for Algorand, potentially triggering panic selling toward $0. 08-$0. 09 levels. This scenario would require a broader cryptocurrency market collapse or Algorand-specific negative developments. Risk factors monitoring include: daily close below $0. 12, RSI breaking below 25, MACD histogram declining further negative, and trading volume spiking on downward moves. Should You Buy ALGO Now? Entry Strategy Based on current Algorand technical analysis, the buy or sell ALGO decision depends heavily on risk tolerance and investment timeframe. For aggressive traders, the current $0. 13 level presents an attractive risk-reward opportunity with tight stop-loss placement at $0. 12. The oversold conditions and analyst targets suggest potential 15-20% gains in the short term. Conservative investors should wait for confirmation above $0. 15 before establishing positions. This approach sacrifices potential gains for higher probability setups and reduces downside risk. Position sizing recommendations suggest limiting ALGO exposure to 2-3% of portfolio given the current volatility. Dollar-cost averaging between $0. 12-$0. 14 provides optimal entry distribution for medium-term holders. Stop-loss placement at $0. 11 (15% below current price) protects against catastrophic breakdown while allowing normal market fluctuation. ALGO Price Prediction Conclusion Our comprehensive ALGO price prediction suggests a cautiously optimistic outlook with a target of $0. 19 by December 2025, representing a 46% upside potential. This prediction carries medium confidence based on oversold technical conditions and analyst consensus. The Algorand forecast hinges on ALGO holding current support at $0. 13 and successfully breaking above $0. 15 resistance within the next 1-2 weeks. Failure to maintain these levels would invalidate the bullish thesis and potentially trigger the bearish scenario toward $0. 10. Key indicators to monitor for prediction confirmation include: RSI moving above 40, MACD histogram turning positive, daily trading volume exceeding $6 million, and successful break above SMA 7 ($0. 15). The timeline for this prediction spans 4-6 weeks, with initial signals expected by early December 2025. Image source: Shutterstock.
https://Blockchain.News/news/20251122-price-prediction-target-algo-019-by-december-2025-despite-current
Everyone ‘Got Played’: Curtis Sliwa Says Americans Were ‘Suckers’ Going Into Trump-Mamdani Meeting
Unsuccessful Republican New York City mayoral nominee Curtis Sliwa told CNN on Friday he thought President Donald Trump’s Oval Office meeting with Democratic Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani proved that past barbs traded by the two men were all for show. Mamdani’s defeated opponent expressed his view on “Laura Coates Live” that Americans “got played” as “suckers” by both the avowed socialist mayor-elect and the president, likening the duo of powerful New Yorkers to actors. Hours earlier, Trump and Mamdani met in the White House and held a discussion widely reported as unexpectedly friendly and cordial, despite the two politicians’ starkly different ideologies and past comments about each other. “Everyone in the world, everyone in the country, everyone in New York City, got played by these two thespians, these actors. Because remember, eight months ago, we thought it was Godzilla versus King Kong,” Sliwa told Coates. “There was Zohran Mamdani calling Donald Trump a fascist he’s not. And then Donald Trump calling Zohran Mamdani a communist he’s not.” (RELATED: Trump Gives Mamdani Permission To Call Him Fascist In Hilarious Oval Office Exchange) During the Oval Office meeting, Trump appeared to laugh off the past name-calling from the campaign. When a reporter asked if Mamdani still believed the president was a “fascist,” Trump jokingly cut-in before the mayor-elect could answer, “That’s okay, you can just say, ‘yes’ . It’s easier than explaining it, I don’t mind.” WATCH: “I’m the street guy and, as you know, Donald Trump did not support me to become the next mayor. And you’re going to find out why, because we just all got played for eight months,” Sliwa continued. He added later he felt “like the American people were turned into suckers” during Trump and Mamdani’s feuding. Sliwa came in a distant third behind Mamdani and former Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who ran as an Independent, in the Big Apple’s Nov. 4 mayoral election. The Republican radio host and Guardian Angels founder received just 7% of the vote after his campaign suffered a major blow with Trump urging New Yorkers to vote for Cuomo. Cuomo was suggested to have had the greatest chance to form a coalition of voters large enough to counter that of Mamdani. “The president said, ‘I’m going to withhold $7 billion of badly needed federal funding for New York City if you elect Zohran Mamdani,’ and then Zohran Mamdani, on the night of his victory, turns and looks into the television and says, ‘Donald Trump, if you’re listening, turn up the volume,’” Sliwa told Coates, paraphrasing early November comments by both the president and mayor-elect. “So, they’re, like, antagonizing their followers. And then all of a sudden, today, we’re expected to believe Kumbaya: everything is fine, everything moves normally. No, no, no, no, no,” Sliwa added. (RELATED: ‘Angry Mamdani’: Socialist Mayor-To-Be Braces For Harsh Reality Check, Analysts Say) Coates then asked the Republican if “a good relationship between Mamdani and Trump” is “actually helpful” to New Yorkers, to which Sliwa responded, “Of course.” “But don’t you think these two men who spent eight months attacking one another and engaging their followers to foment anger towards one another owe the American people and the people of New York City an apology for doing that, because clearly they didn’t mean it?” he continued. “They went into that meeting today, ‘Oh, all is forgiven. All is forgotten.’ And you know, this is the midterm elections.” Businessman Andrew Yang, another former New York City mayoral hopeful, separately appeared to draw a different conclusion from Trump and Mamdani’s warm meeting. Yang, who did not endorse a candidate in the Nov. 4 mayoral election, told Fox News’s Kayleigh McEnany on Saturday he was “thrilled” at the meeting’s “tenor.” WATCH: “Because one of the major pitfalls potentially for a mayor like Mamdani was getting crosswise with this administration, having resources pulled, having ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] officials downtown,” Yang, a former Democratic 2020 candidate for president who left the party in 2021, said on McEnany’s show, “Saturday in America.” “And so the fact that Zohran and Donald Trump seem to be on the same page, so many New Yorkers today are breathing a huge sigh of relief,” he added. “I hope it holds up.” Yang was a 2021 Democratic candidate for New York City mayor and was, at one point, the favorite to win the party’s nomination before ultimately coming in fourth place. He broke with the Democrats later that year, going on to co-found the centrist Forward Party. All content created by the Daily Caller News Foundation, an independent and nonpartisan newswire service, is available without charge to any legitimate news publisher that can provide a large audience. All republished articles must include our logo, our reporter’s byline and their DCNF affiliation. For any questions about our guidelines or partnering with us, please contact licensing@dailycallernewsfoundation. org.
https://dailycaller.com/2025/11/22/curtis-sliwa-cnn-laura-coates-live-donald-trump-zohran-mamdani-meeting-andrew-yang-fox-news-kayleigh-mcenany-saturday-america/
The Challenge of Parenting Young Adults
The kids are grown. In theory, the parents’ job is done. But for many parents, the anxiety regarding their children’s well-being continues. Though there are shelves full of books on parenting young children and teens, there is a relative dearth of advice for this stage, which occurs between finishing traditional school and having a career or their own family life. Despite having much less power to influence adult children, parents still hope their children will land that ideal job, find a healthy partner, avoid major disappointments, and live a better life than the parents themselves did. Parents hope to protect their grown children from the vagaries of unfairness in the world. Parents may blame themselves for whatever vulnerabilities their children have. The limited parenting role may be frustrating when parents wish, under the best of circumstances, for more opportunities to help their children. Despite this wish, increasing parent participation undermines the most important task of this age-to experience life, directly learning lessons for oneself. This lack of control for parents can lead to significant distress and a sense of loss during the young adult stage of parenting. Even with best best-case scenarios, there is still parental uncertainty and young adult missteps. How much should a reasonable parent do? 7 Strategies for Parental Coping as Children Reach Adulthood Manage parental anxiety Having less control may lead to more anxiety. Parents are no longer privy to information about how their children are doing. The days of obsessively checking the school website to get minute-by-minute accountings of their children’s assignments and grades are over. There are no calls from other parents to give the inside scoop about what is going on in the child’s friend network. There are few, if any, opportunities to view a child’s interactions directly. On the bright side, this lack of information can provide enormous freedom. A burden has been lifted, even if it leaves a void. The best advice may be to practice living with less information and remember that having the information would not necessarily be useful at this age. After all, when young adults are living on their own, does knowing their bedtime actually make the parents sleep better at night? Trust development By this age, the young adult has learned, to the best of their abilities, the lessons taught to them. Sure, they will make mistakes, but most of these errors will have some remedy. And mistakes provide learning opportunities. It is much harder to trust development when launching children who are truly not ready yet. There is a population of young adults who may never be due to medical or cognitive disabilities. In those cases, it is essential to put other external supports in place that help bridge the gap between complete reliance on parents and complete independence. Shift parental thinking Part of the difficulty in this stage is the feeling of losing parental control and still being in the role of parent. How the parent thinks about it can make an enormous differenceçmoving from a concept of loss to the idea of creating opportunities for new challenges outside the life as a parent or reimagining what being a parent means. Shifting from “holding on tightly” to “this is the way it is supposed to go, and I have done my job well if they are almost ready” can make a big difference. Let them and let me In the Mel Robbins book The Let Them Theory (2024), Robbins advises focusing on what can be controlled and shifting away from what can’t. “Let them” in this context might mean: “Let your child choose their own path. Let them have their own feelings. Let them make their own choices without inspiring guilt. Let them take the risks, within reason, about what to study and where to live.” There’s also a separate side, the “let me” side. “Let me enjoy what I can with my child. Let me make new choices and choose new paths. Finally, let me appreciate the ways my children are different from me, let me appreciate who they are, and let me learn from them.” Model what you would want them to do Most children learn Recognize that there is no way to shield children from disappointment Young adults are going to make a boatload of mistakes, meet a ton of adversity, and manage lots of disappointment. No matter how carefully crafted the parenting plan is, no one can shield kids from those challenges. Radical acceptance, the practice of accepting reality as it is, an important concept from dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) (Linehan and Wilks, 2015), will help parents tolerate their children’s difficulties. Skip “I told you so” When do young adult children need parents the most? Is it when they are performing to the accolades of those around them? Sure, you will be there for the joys and celebrations, and your children will appreciate it. But is this when they need their parents the most? No. They need their parents when they are alone; when they have messed up, and they know it, and it might affect their chances for a job or school; when they have lost an important relationship, regardless of who broke it off or whose fault it is; and when their world hasn’t been kind. They need to know parents will be there for the rainy moments. There are so many uncertainties in parenting, and they do not disappear when children hit age 18. Parenting through this transitional age has its challenges and rewards. Launching and allowing for experiential learning are so important. If the young adult keeps coming back, and their parents meet the moment, those uncertain times will be OK.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/aligning-for-growth/202511/the-challenge-of-parenting-young-adults
More than 600 Flock camera locations in Hampton Roads are public for the first time. See the map.
A federal judge in Norfolk released the locations of more than 600 Flock Safety surveillance cameras in Hampton Roads the first time such a compilation has been made public. Local cities and counties have rejected requests from the media and privacy activists for lists of Flock camera locations often citing a provision under Virginia open records law for “critical infrastructure information.” But U. S. Magistrate Judge Lawrence R. Leonard ordered a regional camera location list unsealed as part of a federal lawsuit against Norfolk about the systems that read license plates and log other information about passing vehicles. Two city residents are suing the Norfolk police, contending that officers are violating citizens’ rights by searching the Flock database without a warrant. Their attorneys attached the camera list to a recent court filing and Leonard ruled the list cannot be filed under seal. “The public has a legitimate interest in knowing where Flock’s cameras are located when those cameras are operated by public entity customers,” Leonard wrote in an Oct. 31 ruling. The list was unsealed Thursday. The list included the locations complete with street addresses and geographical coordinates of 614 Flock cameras in Hampton Roads. The includes 216 cameras in Norfolk 175 placed by Norfolk police, 24 by the Norfolk Redevelopment and Housing Authority and 17 by Norfolk State University. The list also includes the locations of 87 cameras It also lists 17 cameras in Isle of Wight County and 10 in Franklin. Police agencies widely share the amassed data with each other. The list does not include Flock cameras in York County, Williamsburg, James City County, Gloucester, Poquoson or Mathews, even as those jurisdictions have about 90 cameras among them. The lawyers who requested the camera location information did not include those jurisdictions. The list unsealed Thursday is also separate from a crowdsourcing database in which privacy activists log the camera locations through various methods including by spotting cameras on the street. The website deflock. me, for example, has mapped hundreds of cameras in Hampton Roads and some 56, 000 cameras worldwide. The list the judge ordered unsealed was compiled by Flock Safety, the Atlanta-based company whose cameras have spiked sharply in recent years. The cameras typically mounted on 12-foot poles take pictures of all cars that pass. The system logs not only license plates, but a vehicle’s make, body type and color and even such features as bike racks, dents and bumper stickers. Detectives can query the system for which cars passed by the cameras at certain times and places. The data is stored for 21 days and is widely shared among police agencies. Police rave about the Flock Safety cameras in helping solve a wide range of crimes, from stolen cars to homicides. But privacy advocates are growing alarmed with the increased surveillance, contending that Flock cameras allow police to track law-abiding citizens and not just criminals. In their federal lawsuit, Norfolk residents Lee Schmidt and Crystal Arrington contend the Norfolk police routinely violate their constitutional rights with the city’s 175 Flock cameras and its amassed database. Not getting a warrant to search the system, they maintain, is a violation of their Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches. Flock Safety provided the camera locations in May as part of the lawsuit, following a subpoena from the plaintiffs’ attorneys. But Flock asserted that the information is confidential and asked that it remain sealed. Police departments and sheriff’s offices in Hampton Roads have largely asserted over the years that releasing the camera locations could jeopardize law enforcement efforts by allowing people to avoid detection. But Leonard denied the request. The public’s right to access court records, Leonard wrote, arises from both the First Amendment and the common law. Judges can restrict access to court records only when there’s a “compelling governmental interest” to do so, Leonard said. And even then, the restrictions must be as “narrowly tailored” as possible. “The Court will not simply ‘rubber-stamp’ a party’s request to seal,” Leonard wrote. Though proprietary information can indeed be sealed, Leonard said, it’s not enough for a party to unilaterally declare something confidential. Instead, he said, the party must prove that such sealing is necessary. And in his Oct. 31 ruling, Leonard said Flock Safety failed to prove that. The locations of Flock cameras owned by private companies can remain sealed, the judge said. Such cameras are purchased by retail stores, private apartment complexes and homeowners’ associations, then tied into the police systems. Given that those cameras are privately owned, Leonard said, they “do not raise the same concerns about governmental transparency.” But that’s not the case, he said, for the 614 cameras owned by cities, counties and other government agencies in the region. Flock has not demonstrated that its interest in keeping the files sealed outweighs the presumption of public access to court files. Michael Soyfer, an attorney for The Institute for Justice who is suing Norfolk on behalf of Schmidt and Arrington, was glad to see the list unsealed. The assertion that the camera locations must be “super secret,” he said, is incompatible with the idea that the cameras are nothing to worry about and that “it’s fine for the government to track people for weeks at a time.” Leonard “realized that those positions are irreconcilable,” Soyfer said. The government, the attorney said, “shouldn’t be spending public money to install these dragnet region-wide surveillance systems in secret.” He said that there are 24 Flock cameras operated by the Norfolk Redevelopment and Housing Authority which runs the city’s public housing complexes is noteworthy in itself: It shows close monitoring of those residents. “Publication of this list furthers public discourse on these issues,” he said. “It’s something the public should have known long before now.” On Sept. 15, each side filed separate “motions for summary judgement” asking a judge to decide the case in their favor before trial. The city of Norfolk wants U. S. District Judge Mark Davis to toss the case. The Institute for Justice, on the other hand, wants Davis to declare outright that Norfolk violated the right of Schmidt and Arrington. Norfolk says the lawsuit has failed to prove that the police are tracking anyone. Though the lawsuit had asserted the city is “cataloguing the whole of tens of thousands of individuals’ movements,” the city says it’s doing nothing of the kind. “Plaintiffs have no evidence to support these allegations because they are wrong,” the city said. Instead, Norfolk claimed police can draw only “some limited inferences” about citizens’ movements from the data collection. Flock cameras help police “respond to emergencies in real time and solve and prevent crime,” the city said. But the Norfolk Police Department “does not need a warrant to use information about vehicles on public streets to protect people in Norfolk.” The Institute for Justice’s motion says Schmidt and Arrington were tracked on Norfolk’s camera systems hundreds of times in less than five months. “The Flock Cameras yield a massive trove of data anyone with access can mine for insights about people’s movements, habits, and routines,” the motion said. The Norfolk police have conducted more than 200, 000 searches, with no oversight on the justification for the searches, and cursory “audits” only beginning in May. “Even now, each “audit” is nothing more than a box-checking exercise, given the massive number of searches,” the motion says. “None of these hundreds of thousands of searches required probable cause, let alone a warrant.” Davis is expected to rule on the summary judgement motions in the coming weeks. If he allows the case to proceed, the trial is expected to begin Feb. 3. Peter Dujardin, 757-897-2062, pdujardin@dailypress. com.
https://www.dailypress.com/2025/11/22/flock-camera-locations/
(Column) No veteran should go hungry
According to U. S. government data and recent policy studies, nearly 25% of America’s veterans live either below the federal poverty level or paycheck to paycheck, with little margin for unexpected expenses. To get by, many adopt emergency-level budgets. But even the harshest austerity measures may not be enough. Life at the bottom still costs money. Mortgages and rent must be paid. Vehicles are needed to reach work or medical appointments. So, what can be cut? Too often, it’s food-eating less or sacrificing nutrition. Tragically, many veterans and their families face this choice every day. The latest data from the U. S. Department of Agriculture shows that 7. 5% of veterans-about 1. 5 million-are hungry or food insecure. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) reports that those ages 65-74 are now most at risk, a shift from only a few years ago when 55- to 64-year-olds faced the highest rates. The picture grows bleaker within subgroups. Nearly 1 in 5 women veterans, many raising children, report food insecurity. More than a third of disabled working-age veterans struggle to feed themselves. These aren’t abstractions-they’re neighbors, family and friends. VA disability benefits are often treated as unearned income for the purposes of means testing in some federal programs. But these benefits were never meant to be treated as a paycheck. They were designed to offset the extra costs of living with a disability. In programs where they are counted toward income limits, this classification can unfairly block many veterans from receiving assistance through programs like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP. SNAP can provide essential short-term relief, adding protein, vegetables, and fruit to meals. Yet because disability benefits often push veterans over the income threshold too many are excluded. According to RAND, only 4. 9% of food-insecure veterans in the U. S. received SNAP assistance in 2023. It is a failure of our system when individuals who served this country bravely and honorably-so that others could pursue the American dream-now face malnutrition and hunger. On Veterans Day, crowds gather to give speeches and host parades honoring those who wore the uniform with fierce pride. But veterans can’t eat their pride. On Thanksgiving, we sit down to abundant meals of turkey, vegetables, and homemade desserts, raising a toast to those who secured our freedoms. But veterans can’t eat our thanks. Rather than simply thanking veterans for their service, we can show our gratitude through meaningful action. Immediate steps taken today can make a difference-from supporting or volunteering with trusted organizations like DAV’s Volunteer for Veterans program, to helping at local veteran food pantries and nutrition centers, or urging elected officials to ensure veterans and their families do not go hungry through efforts like DAV’s Commander’s Action Network. These frontline actions have a direct and lasting impact on veterans’ lives. Veterans stood up for us; now it’s our turn to stand up for them. Through awareness, advocacy, and community support, we can work toward a future where all veterans live safe, healthy lives-free from hunger. Now that’s something to give thanks for. Coleman Nee is a service-connected disabled Marine veteran currently serving as National Commander of DAV (Disabled American Veterans). He previously held positions as Massachusetts Secretary of Veterans’ Services and on DAV’s National Executive Committee.
https://enewscourier.com/2025/11/22/column-no-veteran-should-go-hungry/
Dakorien Moore injury: Dan Lanning gets devastating bad news hours before Oregon’s high-profile USC clash
Dan Lanning’s No. 7 Oregon Ducks square off against the No. 15 USC Trojans in Week 13 of the 2025 college football season on Saturday.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/college-football/news-dakorien-moore-injury-dan-lanning-gets-devastating-bad-news-hours-oregon-s-high-profile-usc-clash
