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Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden will address the devastating wildfires that are currently ravaging the West Coast in scheduled remarks on Monday afternoon.During a prepared speech that he delivered at the Natural History Museum in his hometown of Wilmington, Delaware, Biden appealed to voters by attempting to position himself as a champion of environmentalism and a candidate who "respects science."Conversely, Biden painted Trump as a climate change denier, claiming that Trump has ignored the ever-increasing threat brought by climate change."Dangers of climate change are already here," Biden said.In pointed phrasing, Biden later adding that Americans "aren't safe" from natural disasters wrought by climate change in "Donald Trump's America." In recent months, the Trump campaign has pushed the idea that America would not be safe from violent crime in "Joe Biden's America."Biden did not take questions from the media following his address.Biden's address came as millions of acres of forest have been lost to wildfires in recent weeks in more than a dozen states in the western U.S. Among the states hardest hit by the blazes are northern California, Oregon and Washington, which have seen a combined 35 deaths due to wildfire in recent weeks.Though cooler weather helped firefighters calm the fires over the weekend, officials worry that high wind gusts in the region could cause problems in the days to come.Wildfires have become an increasingly dangerous and destructive problem in recent years due to increased temperatures and drought in the region. Some experts believe the crisis will only worsen in years to come.President Donald Trump was scheduled to receive a briefing on the fires during a visit to the Sacramento area on Monday.Biden's speech also came amid a flurry of tropical storm activity in the Atlantic Ocean. As of Monday afternoon, there are five named storms churning in the ocean. One of those storms, Hurricane Sally, is expected to make landfall in Louisiana on Tuesday. 2023
Day two of the Paul Manafort trial resumed Wednesday with testimony from a FBI agent who raided Manafort's home -- as well as President Donald Trump's repeated Twitter attacks on special counsel Robert Mueller's probe, which at one point included a comparison between Manafort and Al Capone.Prosecutors also raised the prospect that Manafort's longtime deputy, Rick Gates, would not be called as a witness after the defense team indicated in its opening statement Tuesday that Manafort's lawyers planned to make Gates' role a key element of the defense.Should Gates not testify as a witness for the prosecution, it would complicate the ability for Manafort's team to make their case against Gates, and might prompt them to call him as a defense witness instead.As Mueller's team made its case against Trump's former campaign chairman in the courtroom, the President took to Twitter to call the prosecution a "hoax" and claim that Manafort worked for the campaign "for a very short time." 995

Data website Currentresults.com compiled data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and found the hottest cities in the country.The data shows the U.S. cities with the hottest average summer highs in June, July and August. Check out the list below for more: 289
DEL MAR (KGTV) - Beachgoers are asked to stay away from a section of shoreline near 8th Street in Del Mar because of a sewage spill Sunday.Del Mar city officials said a leak was reported around 11:30 this morning. Sewage was flowing out of a manhole near 8th Street, they said. A blockage in the sewer line caused about 4,200 gallons of sewage to seep out of the manhole and flow onto the beach. The blockage was fixed around 1 p.m., city officials said. People are asked to stay out of the water between 7th Street and 9th Street for the next 72 hours because of impacts to water quality. City officials will continue to test the water. 670
DALLAS (AP) — Southwest Airlines says its workers must take pay cuts or face furloughs next year. Chairman and CEO Gary Kelly said Monday that unless the federal government gives airlines more money, Southwest will have to sharply cut spending to avoid losing billions of dollars every quarter until a coronavirus vaccine is widely available. Air travel is down nearly 70% from a year ago.“We would have to wipe out a large swath of salaries, wages and benefits to match the low traffic levels to have any hope of just breaking even,” Kelly said in a video to employees.Kelly says he won't take a base salary through 2021, and nonunion workers will face 10% pay cuts in January. Southwest, the fourth-biggest U.S. airline by revenue, recently said it is burning about million a day. It lost 5 million in the second quarter and borrowed billions while cutting back on flights to conserve cash.He says Southwest needs “reasonable concessions” from union employees or the airline will have to consider furloughs. The Dallas-based airline says it's never laid off employees in its roughly 50-year history. 1116
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