43
43
Sep 4, 2024
09/24
by
KPIX
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> reporter: 81-year-old sallie reeves is watching her rancho palos verdes home crumble to pieces.> the stairway was coming away from the wall. >> reporter: for more than six months now, every room in the house she's lived in for 42 years has fallen apart as the landslides get worse. >> this is what it did to our bedroom. >> reporter: so this was where a bed would normally be. >> our bed was right here. >> reporter: and this is the cracking from this landslide. >> yes. >> reporter: now the power company, southern california edison, has cut off electricity to reeves and hundreds of her neighbors, citing fire concerns. homes across this hillside community are experiencing cracked walls and shifting foundations, all caused by centuries old underground landslides that are creating sinkholes at the surface. one landslide that was recently discovered is as much as 345-feet below ground and moving fast. back-to-back years of extreme rainfall have only accelerated land movement, as much as 50 feet annually. >> there's no playbook for this. >> reporter: local officials pressured california'
. >> reporter: 81-year-old sallie reeves is watching her rancho palos verdes home crumble to pieces.> the stairway was coming away from the wall. >> reporter: for more than six months now, every room in the house she's lived in for 42 years has fallen apart as the landslides get worse. >> this is what it did to our bedroom. >> reporter: so this was where a bed would normally be. >> our bed was right here. >> reporter: and this is the cracking from this...
129
129
Sep 3, 2024
09/24
by
KPIX
tv
eye 129
favorite 0
quote 1
. >> reporter: 81-year-old sallie reeves is watching her rancho palos verdes home crumbled to pieces.rway was coming away from the wall. >> reporter: for more than six months now, every room in the house she has lived in for a 42 years has fallen apart as the landslides get worse.3 >> this is what they did to her bedroom. >> reporter: so this is where your bed would normally be? >> our bed was right here. >> reporter: and this is the cracking from the landslide. >> yes. >> reporter: now the power company southern california edison has cut off power to reeves and several of her neighbors citing fire concerns. homes in the hillside community are experiencing cracked walls and shifting foundations all caused by centuries old underground landslides that are creating sinkholes at the surface. one landslide that was recently discovered is as much as 345 feet below ground. and moving past. back-to-back years of extreme rainfall have only accelerated land movement, as much as 50 feet annually. >> there is no playbook for this. >> reporter: local officials pressured the governor to declare a s
. >> reporter: 81-year-old sallie reeves is watching her rancho palos verdes home crumbled to pieces.rway was coming away from the wall. >> reporter: for more than six months now, every room in the house she has lived in for a 42 years has fallen apart as the landslides get worse.3 >> this is what they did to her bedroom. >> reporter: so this is where your bed would normally be? >> our bed was right here. >> reporter: and this is the cracking from the...
31
31
Sep 4, 2024
09/24
by
KPIX
tv
eye 31
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> reporter: sally reeves is staying put. >> we worked hard to be here. and we're here, and we love it here. >> reporter: you're not going anywhere? >> we're not going anywhere. >> reporter: and others have no option but to leave. this home has sunk more than 10 feet. the entrance used to be close to where i'm standing. officials are warning the power outages will likely continue to expand. meanwhile, there is no clear solution for how to stop this land from sliding. jonathan vigliotti, cbs news, rancho palos verdes. >>> overseas now, ukrainian search teams are still digging through the rubble of a military academy at a hospital targeted in moscow's latest aerial barrage. it happened in the city of poltava, which is the focus of a months' long russian offensive. at least 51 people were killed and hundreds of others wounded in one of the deadliest single strikes of the war. other missiles and drones rained down on cities across the country. cbs' ian lee has more on this from london. >> reporter: cadets were gathering at this military academy tuesday mornin
. >> reporter: sally reeves is staying put. >> we worked hard to be here. and we're here, and we love it here. >> reporter: you're not going anywhere? >> we're not going anywhere. >> reporter: and others have no option but to leave. this home has sunk more than 10 feet. the entrance used to be close to where i'm standing. officials are warning the power outages will likely continue to expand. meanwhile, there is no clear solution for how to stop this land from...
78
78
Sep 23, 2024
09/24
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 78
favorite 0
quote 0
full coverage of the conference and rachel reeves' speech. sally have been sent in the post. this is just a small selection of some of the stuff they have retrieved over recent months, but what we are talking about primarily with this latest ban i a zombie knives in this last column here. these three are already banned because they have images on them, but these two are currently legal but will fall into the band from tomorrow, particularly because of the serrated edge and that fact that there are holes in the blade, so there are certain characteristics about weapons that mean that they will be included in this band from tomorrow. and these are the sorts of weapons that we believe the police are dealing with more and more because of the figures we got through the freedom of information at. 32 police forces across england and wales replied, giving data from their crime logs, and we know there were 16,000 mentions in their data last year of machetes, swords and zombie knives. it suggests the police are handling more and more of these bigger weapons.
full coverage of the conference and rachel reeves' speech. sally have been sent in the post. this is just a small selection of some of the stuff they have retrieved over recent months, but what we are talking about primarily with this latest ban i a zombie knives in this last column here. these three are already banned because they have images on them, but these two are currently legal but will fall into the band from tomorrow, particularly because of the serrated edge and that fact that there...
26
26
Sep 23, 2024
09/24
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 26
favorite 0
quote 0
sally bundock. we start here in the uk, where the chancellor rachel reeves will pledge "a budget to rebuild britain"speech to the labour party conference in liverpool today. she's under pressure to provide some optimism after labour's gloomy messaging on the state of the economy they inherited from the conservatives. but her controversial decision to axe winter fuel payments for 10 million pensioners threatens to overshadow her speech, with a vote challenging the move also expected today. let's get more now from joe nellis, who's economic adviser to mha — a uk accounting firm — and professor of global economy at cranfield university. good morning. there good morning. there was good morning. there was a good morning. there was a lot good morning. there was a lot of pressure on rachel reeves to change the music, to be more optimistic, what do you think? i think she will struggle to change the mood music. we are in a difficult position, the economy has been flatlining for the last couple of years, and tax revenue must be her top priority if she is going to spend on the economy but there is the dilemma.
sally bundock. we start here in the uk, where the chancellor rachel reeves will pledge "a budget to rebuild britain"speech to the labour party conference in liverpool today. she's under pressure to provide some optimism after labour's gloomy messaging on the state of the economy they inherited from the conservatives. but her controversial decision to axe winter fuel payments for 10 million pensioners threatens to overshadow her speech, with a vote challenging the move also expected...