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An American, who left the U.S. two weeks ago to climb Machu Pichu in Peru, says he can’t return home. Husband and father, Chris McLeroy, left on March 13, and due to travel bans implemented in efforts to curb the COVID-19 outbreak, he says he can’t get back to America or even across the border to get a flight home.“We are told we are not allowed back into the U.S because the borders of Peru have been closed, and so there is no travel between the regions,” he said.Meanwhile, over 4,000 miles away, his wife and son are forced to wait.“We all have our moments of sad and worry,” said McLeroy’s wife, Jodi. “I have to hide all that because I don’t want my son to see it. I want him to feel safe.”Every day, Jodie McLeroy is working with local officials, including her U.S senator, desperately trying to get her husband home.The couple is trying not to lose hope. “It’s certainly creating an anxiety not being able to be there with my family going through this,” Chris McLeroy said.He says he needs transportation to the nearest airport, but the roads are blocked.“It’s going to take the U.S. government to make that arrangement to get them to the airport,” he said.But, the question is, when will that happen?“I have faith he will make it home,” Jodie McLeroy said. “I just don’t know when.” 1305
Airlines are prohibited from banning specific breeds of dogs on board flights as service or emotional support animals, the US Transportation Department said Thursday, amid controversy over safety and passengers abusing the policies for emotional support animals.The guidelines outlined by department officials appear to invalidate a recently-announced Delta Air Lines policy barring "pit bull type dogs" from traveling as service or emotional support animals.Airlines are allowed a case-by-case determination of whether an animal is safe to travel, and airlines can also require people traveling with emotional support animals to check in at the airport lobby, rather than online, to allow an airline official to review the animal."The airline does have the authority to do an individualized assessment of any dog, every breed of dog, and if any dog -- no matter the breed -- is determined to pose, or deemed to pose a risk to the health or safety of other passengers, the airline is free to deny boarding," a department official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, told reporters on a conference call explaining the change.The Transportation Department is developing new long-term rules for passengers with service animals.The department will not seek to invalidate any airline policies prohibiting animals other than dogs, cats and miniature horses -- the most common species of service animals -- from traveling as emotional support animals, the officials said.Airlines will have one month to change any policies that do not comply with the interpretation. They did not specify which policies or airlines they believe are not in compliance.The airline industry said it supports the DOT guidelines because of its concerns about passengers abusing the allowances for emotional support animals, or ESAs."The availability of fraudulent ESA credentials online has enabled people who are not truly in need of animal assistance to abuse the rules and evade airline policies regarding animals in the cabin," said Airlines for America, an industry group. "With over a million passengers bringing ESAs on flights last year, airlines and airports saw a sharp increase in incidents such as biting and mauling by untrained animals.In one of the more recent incidents, a flight attendant who was bit by an emotional support animal two weeks ago 2352
A Texas police officer shot his adult son Saturday, thinking he was an intruder.Dispatchers received a call around 6 p.m. CDT from a man reporting a shooting at his home. The man said he was an off-duty Dallas officer who mistook his son for an intruder and accidentally shot him, according to a release from the DeSoto Police Department. DeSoto is a city south of Dallas.When officers arrived on scene, they found the victim bleeding from his right forearm. The victim was taken to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, the release said."It was a startling situation, it was an accident," Pete Schulte, DeSoto police spokesman, told 655
A pharmaceutical company has expanded a voluntary recall for medication used to treat hypertension as the medicine includes trace amounts of a chemical that could cause cancer.According to the 205
Always sanitary products will remove the Venus symbol, historically used to represent the female sex, from its products to be inclusive of 151