Baltimore latest among major cities experiencing contamination in water supply

Baltimore latest among major cities experiencing contamination in water supply
Baltimore latest among major cities experiencing contamination in water supply
Tim Graham/Getty Images

(BALTIMORE) — Baltimore has become the latest major city to experience a water crisis involving contamination in the water supply.

City officials have been urging residents to boil tap water for at least one minute after E. coli was discovered in West Baltimore at one sampled location on Friday and another two locations on Saturday. More than 1,500 people were affected by the advisory, as well as several area schools.

Investigators are identifying construction sites that potentially contributed to the contamination, Baltimore Director of Department of Public Works Jason Mitchell told reporters during a press conference Monday, Baltimore ABC affiliate WMAR-TV reported. The health department is flushing the system, as well as performing leak detection and live checks in the area, and increasing chlorination levels, Mitchell said.

Engineers are inspecting the distribution system, treatment systems, pumping facilities and other infrastructure, city officials told reporters during a news conference on Tuesday, WMAR reported.

The boil water notice will remain in effect until the source of the E. coli is determined and the problem has been fixed, the Maryland Department of the Environment said.

There is no evidence so far that the contamination spread to the east or southeast sections of the city, officials said Tuesday after the results came in from another round of tests that were sampled on Monday.

The health department takes 360 samples from 90 locations throughout the city each month to identify potential issues with water quality.

The city began distributing water to impacted communities once the contamination was announced. More than 1,700 gallons of water were handed out on Monday alone, and the distribution continued into Tuesday, officials said.

Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott told reporters Monday that the city is “taking this issue seriously.”

“We understand deeply the concerns of residents and we want to assure them that their health and well-being are our first priority,” Scott said.

Baltimore officials did not give a timeframe on when the water supply would be deemed safe.

Other major cities have been seeing water supplies contaminated in recent days.

In the East Village neighborhood of New York City, drinking water at the Jacob Riis Houses, a New York City Housing Authority Complex, was found to have dangerous levels of arsenic, ABC New York station WABC-TV reported.

Thousands of residents were forced to use water bottles and portable water stations throughout the holiday weekend after they were told not to drink or cook with the water from their taps, according to WABC.

The housing authority began testing the water weeks ago after receiving reports of cloudy water. Tests came back positive for arsenic on Friday, but there is no evidence that the arsenic levels are connected to the initial cloudy water reports, according to city officials.

The first positive samples came from two high-rise buildings, where the water goes into a tank on the roof after leaving the main line, said NYCHA Senior Vice President for Healthy Homes Daniel Greene. More samples have been taken from low-rise buildings as a precaution, Greene said.

The office of New York City Mayor Eric Adams advised residents to continue using bottled water until the test results for 100 additional locations come in. Residents are also being asked to help flush out the system in case the contamination is in the buildings’ pipes by turning faucets on and letting the water run for three hours, three floors at a time.

Jackson, Mississippi, is also facing another water crisis after river flooding compounded issues with water pressure at long-failing treatment systems.

Officials in Jackson announced last week that cooking and cleaning, firefighting, flushing toilets and bathing would be widely unavailable for the state capital’s 180,000 residents other than for critical outside aid.

The problems with the city’s water supplies persist more than a year after the city faced another water emergency when back-to-back winter storms wreaked havoc on the city’s water system.

By March 2021, thousands of residents had been without water for more than a week as members of the Mississippi National Guard trucked bottled water into the city.

Residents told ABC News they are fatigued over the “ongoing issue” that has been plaguing the O.B. Curtis Water Treatment Plant for years.

“I think our concern as citizens is even after all of this, after they put all the money into the water plant, will we have qualified staff to continue to run the plant?” said resident Velma Warner.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Luke Combs is giving away custom pairs of Bose headphones

Luke Combs is giving away custom pairs of Bose headphones
Luke Combs is giving away custom pairs of Bose headphones
ABC/Connie Chornuk

Luke Combs has a special giveaway for fans.

The country superstar got his hands on a pair of Bootleggers Bose headphones, and rather than keep them for himself, he’s giving them away to some lucky fans.

The two pairs come in black and white, along with a custom case that boasts a drawing of a vintage car with the Luke Combs logo painted on the side. The hitmaker also shows a photo of himself signing the cases with a silver Sharpie.

“Bootleggers! @bose sent me these special edition headphones and I figured I’d autograph them and do a GIVEAWAY, so COMMENT which ones you’d rather have and I’ll pick some winners!” Luke explains.

Among the fans vying for the prize is Luke’s wife Nicole, who commented, “wait whattttt I want one” with a crying laughing and heart-eyed emoji.

“Rig the drawing for ya boy,” adds Luke’s frequent songwriting collaborator, Ray Fulcher.

Among other products Luke has branded include his own line of Crocs and a ball cap embroidered with his logo.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Dirty Honey & Dorothy unite for “bromance tour experience”

Dirty Honey & Dorothy unite for “bromance tour experience”
Dirty Honey & Dorothy unite for “bromance tour experience”
ABC Audio

Dirty Honey‘s California Dreamin’ tour just got even dreamier now that Dorothy‘s joined the bill.

As Dorothy frontwoman Dorothy Martin tells ABC Audio, her band and the “When I’m Gone” rockers are “bros,” so it was only a matter of time before they linked up on the road.

“It just kinda made sense, like, ‘Hey, why don’t we all go out on tour together and have a bromance tour experience?'” Martin says. “I think it’s gonna be a lot of fun.”

Dirty Honey frontman Marc LaBelle adds that he’s excited for Dorothy to bring another “flavor of rock” to the tour lineup.

“I’d say [Dorothy is] a little heavier than us at times, for most of the material,” LaBelle says. “But … she’s got some really soulful [songs], like, ‘Flawless’ to me is a really soulful, more major-y tune that would fit really nicely with our ‘Another Last Time.'”

As for Dirty Honey’s own set, LaBelle is hoping to inject some new material into the show after touring the last year in support of the band’s 2021 self-titled debut.

“I know we’re all really excited to start playing some new material and just seeing what the audience thinks about it, and seeing if we’re on track for the next record,” LaBelle shares.

Martin, meanwhile, is looking forward to playing more new songs off Dorothy’s new album, Gifts from the Holy Ghost, which dropped in April.

“It’s always fun to play new material, because you can’t just play the same songs over and over again,” Martin says. “I know fans wanna hear the hits, or their fan-favorites for every artist at every concert, but … it’s fun for us to play new stuff, it keeps it exciting.”  

Dorothy’s first show with Dirty Honey takes place Wednesday in Portland, Oregon.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Modest Mouse schedules 25th anniversary ’The Lonesome Crowded West’ tour

Modest Mouse schedules 25th anniversary ’The Lonesome Crowded West’ tour
Modest Mouse schedules 25th anniversary ’The Lonesome Crowded West’ tour
Astrida Valigorsky/Getty Images

Modest Mouse has announced a U.S. tour celebrating the 25th anniversary of the band’s 1997 album, The Lonesome Crowded West.

The outing will kick off November 18 in Missoula, Montana, and will conclude December 17 in New York City. Tickets go on sale this Friday, September 9, at 10 a.m. local time.

Modest Mouse will be selling a special edition vinyl version of The Lonesome Crowded West during the shows. A limited number of LPs will be available to preorder ahead of the tour.

For the full list of dates and all ticket info, visit ModestMouse.com.

The Lonesome Crowded West, the second Modest Mouse album, helped establish the group as a beloved indie band. They later gained mainstream recognition with 2004’s Good News for People Who Love Bad News, which spawned the single “Float On.”

Modest Mouse is currently on tour supporting the band’s latest album, 2021’s The Golden Casket. The outing concludes September 11 in Atlanta.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Blondie drummer Clem Burke dishes on band’s upcoming studio album

Blondie drummer Clem Burke dishes on band’s upcoming studio album
Blondie drummer Clem Burke dishes on band’s upcoming studio album
Blondie’s Chris Stein, Debbie Harry and Clem Burke; Jon Kopaloff/FilmMagic

Last month, Blondie released the expansive Against the Odds box set, which takes a deep dive into the influential new wave band’s past. But the group is also looking toward the future with a new studio album that founding drummer Clem Burke says is due out next year.

“I think it’s gonna come out in the spring,” Burke tells ABC Audio. “I think we’re pretty much on track for that. And we have been getting a lot of interesting offers to play live next year at festivals that we are probably going to do, in conjunction with the release of the album.”

Blondie started work on the album before the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, which Burke says delayed the project.

“Yeah, we put that process on hold until we were all able to be in the studio together,” the 67-year-old Rock & Roll Hall of Famer explains, “’cause we wanted to follow suit with the way we did our last album of new music, [2017’s] Pollinator.”

Burke says the upcoming record was made with the same producer who worked on Pollinator, John Congleton.

Pollinator featured several guest collaborators, including former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr, who wrote the song “My Monster.” Clem says Marr has also written a track that’s expected to appear on the new album.

Meanwhile, Burke reports that original Sex Pistols bassist Glen Matlock, who filled in for Blondie’s bassist, Leigh Fox, on their recent tour dates, also contributed to the upcoming record.

In addition, Clem reveals the album will include “a very left-field cover” of a song by a 1960s New York underground band “that will be very surprising for a lot of people,” and that’s “not The Velvet Underground.”

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

‘The Bachelorette’ recap: Has Gabby found her man?

‘The Bachelorette’ recap: Has Gabby found her man?
‘The Bachelorette’ recap: Has Gabby found her man?
ABC/Gizelle Hernandez

The drama and romance of fantasy suites continued on Tuesday’s episode of The Bachelorette.

Picking up where they left off on Monday’s episode, Gabby, who sent Johnny home following his admission that he wasn’t ready for an engagement, and her relationship with Erich on the rocks after he expressed his discomfort with her potentially spending the night with the other men — found herself sending Jason home after his bombshell that he also wasn’t ready for a commitment.

Gabby would later pay Erich a visit, to let him know that he was that he was the only man left, and therefore go on to meet her family.

Meanwhile, Zach, who felt confident going into his date with Rachel, was “blindsided” by her sudden doubt as to whether or not he wasn’t ready for an engagement, citing their age difference — he’s 25 and she’s 26. After an emotional conversation with host Jesse Palmer, he planned to speak to her before the rose ceremony.

However, the results of that conversation, and the results of the rose ceremony will have to wait until next week’s season finale “to prepare ourselves for the shocking events that are about to take place — events that are going to change both Gabby’s and Rachel’s lives forever,” Palmer, standing in an empty studio, explained.

“Prepare yourselves for the most shocking finale of all time,” he concluded.

The Bachelorette season 19 finale airs Tuesday at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Scoreboard roundup — 9/6/22

Scoreboard roundup — 9/6/22
Scoreboard roundup — 9/6/22
iStock

(NEW YORK) — Here are the scores from Tuesday’s sports events:

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

INTERLEAGUE
Atlanta 10, Oakland 9

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Tampa Bay 8, Boston 4
Cleveland 4, Kansas City 1
Baltimore 9, Toronto 6
Texas 4, Houston 3
LA Angels 5, Detroit 4 (10)
Seattle 3, Chi White Sox 0
Minnesota at NY Yankees (Postponed)

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Pittsburgh 8, NY Mets 2
Philadelphia 3, Miami 2
St. Louis 4, Washington 1
Chi Cubs 9, Cincinnati 3
Colorado 10, Milwaukee 7
San Diego 6, Arizona 5
LA Dodgers 6, San Francisco 3

WOMEN’S NATIONAL BASKETBALL ASSOCIATION PLAYOFFS
Connecticut 104, Chicago 80
Las Vegas 97, Seattle 92

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Pediatric COVID-19 infections increase as kids head back to school

Pediatric COVID-19 infections increase as kids head back to school
Pediatric COVID-19 infections increase as kids head back to school
Marko Geber/Getty Images

(NEW YORK) — As children head back to the classroom for the academic year, new data shows that pediatric COVID-19 infection rates have increased for the second consecutive week.

Last week, more than 90,600 additional child COVID-19 cases were reported, an increase of 14% from two weeks prior, when just under 80,000 cases were reported, according to a new report from the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) and the Children’s Hospital Association (CHA).

The increase comes despite an overall plateauing of COVID-19 infections nationally.

Overall, totals remain significantly lower than during other parts of the pandemic. Since mid-May, data shows that new cases have plateaued, fluctuating between a high of about 68,000 to 112,000 cases.

However, many Americans who are taking at-home tests are not submitting their results, and thus, experts say daily case totals are likely significantly higher than the numbers that are officially reported.

More than 14.5 million children have tested positive for the virus since the onset of the pandemic, and since the beginning of 2022, approximately 6.65 million reported cases have been added. Children represent about a fifth of all reported cases on record.

Despite the uptick in infections, with COVID-19 vaccine mandates in schools still virtually nonexistent, millions of children remain completely unvaccinated.

Overall, about 43.1 million eligible children remain completely unvaccinated, according to federal data.

Most of the nearly 30 million children who have received at least one shot are older children. The vast majority of the youngest Americans under the age of 5 — or just 1 million out of the 19.5 million children in that age group — have yet to receive a COVID-19 shot, according to federal data.

AAP and CHA said there is an “urgent” need to collect more age-specific data to assess the severity of illness related to new variants, as well as potential longer-term effects.

“It is important to recognize there are immediate effects of the pandemic on children’s health, but importantly, we need to identify and address the long-lasting impacts on the physical, mental and social well-being of this generation of children and youth,” the organizations wrote.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

‘Fat Leonard’ on the run days before sentencing: US Marshals

‘Fat Leonard’ on the run days before sentencing: US Marshals
‘Fat Leonard’ on the run days before sentencing: US Marshals
kali9/Getty Images

(SAN DIEGO, Calif.) — A former naval contractor who was convicted of bribing Navy officers with millions of dollars worth of lavish cigars, prostitutes and cash allegedly cut off his ankle monitor on Sunday and is now on the run, according to the U.S. Marshals Service.

Leonard Francis, also known as “Fat Leonard,” was awaiting sentencing on Sept. 22 after being found guilty in 2015 of bribing officers with gifts and millions in cash, in exchange for information about the movements of naval ships. In one instance, according to the Justice Department, Francis was able to have a ship moved to a port he owned in Malaysia.

On Sunday, U.S. Marshals showed up at Francis’ home after being alerted that his GPS ankle monitor was being tampered with, according to a press release from the agency.

“Members of the San Diego Fugitive Task Force went to Francis’ residence, in an attempt to locate him,” the Marshals said. “After announcing themselves, task force officers made entry into the residence through an unlocked door. After a thorough check of the residence, officers were unable to locate Francis. Officers were able to locate the GPS ankle monitor that had been cut off.”

“His current whereabouts are unknown,” the agency added.

Since 2013, there have been more than 30 naval officers charged in connection with his case. A judge ruled that Francis had to forfeit the $35 million he was convicted of defrauding the U.S. government by when he overbilled government contracts and bribed naval officials.

“In his plea agreement, Francis conceded that over the course of the conspiracy, he and [his contracting company] gave public officials millions of dollars in things of value, including over $500,000 in cash; hundreds of thousands of dollars in the services of prostitutes and associated expenses; hundreds of thousands of dollars in travel expenses, including airfare, often first or business class, luxurious hotel stays, incidentals and spa treatments; hundreds of thousands of dollars in lavish meals, top-shelf alcohol and wine and entertainment; and hundreds of thousands of dollars in luxury gifts, including designer handbags and leather goods, watches, fountain pens, fine wine, champagne, Scotch, designer furniture, consumer electronics, ornamental swords and hand-made ship models,” according to a Justice Department release.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

American killed in shark attack while snorkeling in the Bahamas: Police

American killed in shark attack while snorkeling in the Bahamas: Police
American killed in shark attack while snorkeling in the Bahamas: Police
Obtained by ABC News

(ROSE ISLAND, Bahamas) — An American was killed in a shark attack while snorkeling in the Bahamas on Tuesday, authorities said.

The victim, a Pennsylvanian woman in her 50s, was attacked by a bull shark off Rose Island shortly before 2 p.m. local time Tuesday, Bahamas authorities said.

The woman was in a popular snorkeling area with her family when the attack occurred, police said. Five to seven people were snorkeling at the time.

The victim, who has not been publicly identified by police, was on a cruise with family, authorities said.

Royal Caribbean said in a statement that the woman was a guest on a seven-night Harmony of the Seas cruise that sailed from Port Canaveral, Florida, on Sunday.

She was on an “independent shore excursion” in Nassau when attacked by a shark and succumbed to her injuries at a local hospital, the company said.

“Royal Caribbean is providing support and assistance to the guest’s loved ones during this difficult time,” the statement said.

In June 2019, an American tourist snorkeling off Rose Island was killed in a shark attack. The victim, 21-year-old Loyola-Marymount University student Jordan Lindsey, died after a school of sharks attacked her.

ABC News’ Mina Kaji contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2022, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.