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Oklahoma City area hit by 4.1-magnitude earthquake on Saturday

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Oklahoma City area hit by 4.1-magnitude earthquake on Saturday

(VORNews) –  A 4.1-magnitude earthquake hit central Oklahoma City early Saturday morning, after a slightly bigger earthquake the night before and accompanied by a series of lesser quakes.

The earthquake struck shortly after 5:30 a.m. local time, approximately 19 miles north of Oklahoma Citi, near the Northeast Edmond Gas and Oil Field. The earthquake, which had a depth of around 4.1 miles, was one of many that occurred on Friday and Saturday, according to the US Geological Survey.

On Saturday morning, the Oklahoma Geological Survey issued a statement stating that there had been reports of significant shaking in the nearby vicinity and around Oklahoma City.

State seismologist Jake Walter told USA TODAY that the area had seen around 18 earthquakes in the last 12 hours. Walter concluded that a fault that geologists had discovered was the cause of the earthquakes.

The number of earthquakes in Oklahoma City has increased

Oklahoma City area hit by 4.1-magnitude earthquake on Saturday

According to him, the number of earthquakes in the area has increased in recent years. Human activities, including fracking, have accelerated the growth. Although there was a spike in activity in the region between 2015 and 2016, it has continued to experience minor seismic activity that is occasionally imperceptible to locals.

However, no wastewater dumping appears to have occurred in the region recently. “It’s a little bit of a mystery why you’ve had this sudden recurrence of very strong, widely felt earthquakes,” he went on to say.

According to the USA TODAY Network’s The Oklahoman, locals reported experiencing tremors on social media. A 4.3-magnitude earthquake occurred on Friday night, approximately one mile from the epicenter of the quake that occurred early Saturday morning.

There was also an earthquake on Saturday morning, with a magnitude of 2.7, according to the US Geological Survey. The United States Geological Survey (USGS) lowered the reported magnitudes of two earthquakes on Saturday: one that occurred early on Saturday (4.1) and another that occurred late on Friday (4.4).

As a precaution against potentially devastating aftershocks, state authorities urged citizens to safeguard important possessions and to follow the “Drop, Cover, and Hold On” protocol.

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Tropical Storms in the Gulf do not Threaten Texas. Another Hurricane is Coming to Florida.

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Tropical Storm

(VOR News) – The National Hurricane Center did not believe that Tropical Storm Milton posed a direct threat to the Texas Gulf Coast, despite the fact that it formed in the southwest of the Gulf of Mexico.

Rather, the forecasts predicted that the system would travel eastward, gain strength in the open waters of the Gulf of Mexico, and then make its way near the western side of the Florida Peninsula as a tropical storm or maybe a major hurricane.

The storm was designated as a tropical depression by the hurricane center, which is the least powerful kind of tropical cyclone. This designation was announced earlier in the morning on Saturday.

As of 1:00 PM on Saturday, satellite wind data showed that maximum sustained wind speeds had reached 40 mph. This suggests that Tropical Storm Milton developed from a Tropical Storm Cyclone.

Tropical storms become hurricanes when they reach 74mph.

When the greatest wind speed is higher than 110 miles per hour, there is a major hurricane.

At 1:00 PM on Saturday, the center of Tropical Depression 14 was situated roughly 220 miles to the north-northeast of Veracruz, Mexico. With maximum sustained winds of forty miles per hour, the system was traveling three miles per hour in a north-northeast direction. In 2024, the Atlantic hurricane season will feature thirteen named storms, with this one being the thirteenth.

The National Hurricane Center announced on Saturday that there were no watches or advisories in force for the Gulf of Mexico’s coastal areas.

On the other hand, experts predicted that as early as Sunday, hurricane and Tropical Storm surge watches would be needed for a few locations along the Florida Peninsula’s west coast.

The upper Texas Gulf Coast region close to Houston is only predicted to see sporadic showers and coastal rainfall. The main source of these showers and rains is predicted to be an inflow of air that is high in moisture from offshore.

The Southeast Texas office of the National Weather Service issued a warning concerning the presence of dangerous rip currents along beaches that front the Gulf of Mexico.

In keeping with its easterly motion, the National Weather Service said on Saturday that “we should continue to see isolated to scattered activity (associated with this feature) develop and move across our coastal waters and southernmost counties today.”

“We could see showers/isolated storms reach as far north as the I-10 corridor through the afternoon hours,” the service added.

What surprises does the Tropical Storm system hold for us?

It seemed as unlikely as thirty percent that a Tropical Storm cyclone would emerge just two days ago. But over the last twenty-four hours, a variety of favorable factors—such as low vertical wind shear, unusually warm sea surface temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico, and other favorable conditions—have accelerated the development of the system.

Analysts from the hurricane center said on Saturday that they expect a slow movement in the direction of the northeast or east-northeast within the next day or so. “By Monday and Tuesday, it is anticipated that the motion will pick up speed and move from east-northeast to northeast.”

Tropical Depression 14 is expected to linger in the southwest portion of the Gulf of Mexico through Sunday night, according to forecasters. On Monday and Tuesday, meanwhile, as it approaches the southern portion of the Gulf of Mexico, it will quickly intensify.

The Hurricane Center said in its Saturday forecast that “the depression is forecast to become a tropical storm later today and a hurricane by early Monday.” This forecast was issued prior to the cyclone moving toward the Florida Peninsula’s west coast around midweek.

Forecasters believe the Tropical Storm has the potential to strengthen into a powerful hurricane as it moves across the central and eastern Gulf of Mexico.

This storm would be the second significant hurricane to hit Florida in less than a month, coming just a few weeks after Hurricane Helene’s destructive impact on northern Florida on September 26.

This storm would be the second significant hurricane to hit Florida in less than a month if the forecast proves correct.

SOURCE: HC

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The Supreme Court Weighs in on Nuclear Waste Storage Proposals in Rural Texas and New Mexico.

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Supreme Court

(VOR News) – On Friday, the Supreme Court decided to step in and settle a disagreement over the planned storage of radioactive waste in rural Texas and New Mexico.

The 5th United States Circuit Supreme Court of Appeals found that the Radioactive Regulatory Commission had overreached its authority under federal law when it authorized a private company to store spent radioactive material for forty years at a West Texas dump.

The justices have stated that they will examine this ruling in greater detail. The plans for a facility that resembles the one in New Mexico will change depending on how the lawsuit turns out.

Both states’ political elites are against the facilities.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott, a Republican, said that his state “will not serve as a repository for nuclear waste in the Supreme Court United States.”

Up until now, the country’s efforts to establish a long-term underground storage facility have failed. The political environment surrounding this search is complicated, and one aspect of it is the ongoing push for venues for temporary storage.

At the locations of existing and previous nuclear power reactors across the nation, about 100,000 tons (90,000 metric tons) of spent fuel are accumulating; some of it dates back to the 1980s. This amount is building up at a rate of more than two thousand tons annually. Before being buried at a suitable depth, the waste was supposed to be temporarily kept.

The idea of building a national storage facility on Yucca Mountain, northwest of Las Vegas, has been met with strong opposition from most Nevadans, including government officials. With this in mind, the initiative has been completely shelved.

The ongoing disagreement over nuclear waste storage is one of thirteen issues that the justices have scheduled for their upcoming term, which begins on Monday.

Other notable cases include an appeal by a Texas death row inmate whose execution was last-minutely delayed by the supreme court in July, and a move by gun makers to end a legal dispute in which Mexico is attempting to hold them accountable for gun violence south of the border. These two examples are remarkable.

At the start of next year, the justices in the NRC lawsuit will hear arguments on two questions.

The National Research Council (NRC) asserts that because states have chosen not to engage in the commission’s proceedings, they have relinquished their ability to challenge licensing decisions.

The Federal Appeals and Supreme Courts in Denver and Washington also ruled in its favor.

All of the cases were allowed to continue by the Fifth Circuit. The second question concerns the commission’s jurisdiction to grant permits for facilities that provide temporary storage in compliance with federal law.

Unlikely partners, environmental groups and the state of Texas depended on a 2022 Supreme Court decision holding that Congress must proceed cautiously when granting an agency the power to regulate a matter of significant national interest.

In its decision for Texas, the Fifth Circuit Supreme Court of Appeals found that the issue of how to dispose of the country’s nuclear waste is a “major question” that needs immediate action from Congress.

As a result of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, the commission has long-standing jurisdiction to address nuclear waste, which the Vice President Joe Biden administration has informed the Supreme Court about.

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has authorized Interim Storage Partners LLC to run a facility in the state of Texas. This facility can hold up to 5,000 metric tons of spent nuclear fuel rods from power plants in addition to 231 million tons of other radioactive waste.

The facility would be built in close proximity to an existing Andrews County disposal site for the purpose of getting rid of low-level trash, which includes radioactively exposed things like protective gear. The area in Andrews County is about 350 miles (563.27 kilometers) west of Dallas, close to the Texas–New Mexico state line.

The commission authorized Holtec International to run a temporary storage facility in Lea County, California, which is near Carlsbad in the state’s southeast. The license is opposed by other New Mexico officials and Democratic Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham. Moreover, that license has been revoked by the Fifth Circuit.

By the middle of the following year, we hope to have a decision.

SOURCE: AP

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Analyzing the US Election: Kamala Harris Versus Donald Trump

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Election

(VOR News) – This is an analysis of the 2018 United States election, delineated by numerical data, encompassing swing states, electoral college votes, candidates across the ballot, and millions of potential voters.

The pair

A multitude of independent candidates competed for office, notably Robert F. Kennedy Jr., whose actions garnered significant attention.

Ultimately, the presidential election reduces to a decision between two alternatives: the principal candidates from the major parties, Democrat Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump, are competing for the presidency in an America that is progressively polarized along partisan lines.

It is five o’clock.

Election Day is often recognized on the Tuesday subsequent to the first Monday in November. Election Day is Tuesday, November 5th.

Seventh

The number of states classified as swing states, which do not distinctly support one political party over another, indicating their competitive nature.

Harris and Trump are engaging with voters in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. They are focusing their campaign efforts on these states to enhance their prospects of victory. The election outcome in a tightly contested campaign may hinge on a minimal number of votes in any given state.

In addition to 435

On Election Day, voters will select the next occupant of the White House and also reacquaint themselves with the members of the United States Congress.

This election features 435 available seats in the House of Representatives and 34 seats in the Senate.

A term in the House of Representatives endures for a duration of two years. Currently, Republicans possess the majority in the House of Representatives, while Harris’s Democrats are anticipating a shift in sentiment.

There are 34 vacant seats out of 100 in the Senate for a tenure duration of six years. The Republicans are striving to diminish the narrow majority possessed by the Democrats.

5838

We would like to introduce you to the Electoral College, the indirect system of universal suffrage in the United States that governs presidential elections.

Each state possesses a distinct number of electors, calculated by summing the number of its representatives in the House of Representatives, which fluctuates based on population, with the fixed number of two senators per state.

Rural Vermont offers a total of three electoral votes. Currently, Giant California possesses 54.

The aggregate number of electors is 538, distributed throughout all fifty states and the District of Columbia. A candidate must obtain a total of 270 votes to secure the presidency.

At 774,000

The Pew Research Center reported the number of polling staff members who volunteered to facilitate the smooth execution of the 2020 election.

The United States has three types of election personnel.

The majority are represented by poll workers, employed to greet voters, assist those with language problems, set up voting equipment, and verify voter identification and registration.

Pew indicates that election officials are frequently elected, employed, or appointed to perform specialized tasks, including instructing poll workers. These officials may also receive appointments.

Political parties typically enlist poll observers to monitor the ballot counting process, which is expected to be more challenging this year due to Trump’s refusal to unreservedly accept the outcome.

A number of election workers have previously communicated with AFP regarding the pressure and threats they are facing in anticipation of the November 5 election.

A total of 244 million.

According to the Bipartisan Policy Center’s findings, the number of United States residents eligible to vote in 2024.

The exact number of citizens who will exercise their right to vote remains uncertain. According to the Pew Research Center, the midterm elections of 2018 and 2022, together with the presidential election of 2020, exhibited three of the highest voter turnouts in the United States in decades.

According to the Pew Research Center’s website, approximately two-thirds (66%) of the voting-eligible population participated in the 2020 presidential election, marking the greatest turnout rate for any national election since 1900.

The Census Bureau estimates that approximately 155 million individuals have voted.

SOURCE: NDTV

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