H-1B visa: Canada’s program to poach Silicon Valley talent off to a booming start

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:00:48 GMT

H-1B visa: Canada’s program to poach Silicon Valley talent off to a booming start Canada’s new program for poaching skilled technology workers from Silicon Valley hit its maximum 10,000 applications the day after it launched, according to the Canadian government.The nation to the north announced last month it would start issuing work permits to foreign citizens living and working in the U.S. under the H-1B visa, which is intended for jobs requiring specialized skills and is used heavily by the Silicon Valley tech industry to secure top foreign talent as well as lower-wage contractors employed through staffing firms.The Government of Canada opened the program to applicants on Sunday, and closed it Monday after receiving 10,000 applications.Canada’s consul general in San Francisco, Rana Sarkar, told this news organization last month that he believed the majority of work permits would go to H-1B holders from Silicon Valley. “This is where the talent is,” Sarkar said. “This is where we’re coming to attract talent.”It was not immediately ...

SF Giants stretch win streak to six after resuming suspended game vs. Reds

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:00:48 GMT

SF Giants stretch win streak to six after resuming suspended game vs. Reds The Giants’ suspended game against the Reds resumed Tuesday afternoon and so did their win streak, as Joc Pederson and Michael Conforto drove in 10th-inning runs to help the Giants to a 4-2 victory.Winning their sixth game in a row, the Giants moved a season-high 12 games over .500.Pederson led off the 10th inning with a double off the left-field wall that scored automatic runner Brett Wisely. Then, two batters later, Conforto brought Pederson home with a hard-hit groundball to second base. Cincinnati’s infield was playing in and Jonathan India threw home to try to catch Pederson but was too late.Camilo Doval retired the side in the bottom half, striking out India and Joey Votto to earn the save.Just one inning earlier, Tyler Rogers picked rookie star Elly De La Cruz off second base, taking a bite out of the Reds’ bid for a ninth-inning walk-off. Rogers faked going into his pitching motion and instead continued to step backward, tossing to shortstop Casey Schmitt t...

Lawsuit filed against First Republic Bank over $7M lost for UC Berkeley student scholarships

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:00:48 GMT

Lawsuit filed against First Republic Bank over $7M lost for UC Berkeley student scholarships (BCN) -- First Republic Bank and a financial advisor are being sued over alleged mismanagement of $7 million intended for low-income, first-generation college students at the University of California, Berkeley. The lawsuit was filed on behalf of a San Francisco-based elderly couple, George Miller and Janet McKinley. For more than 25 years, the couple has donated money to UC Berkeley for the Miller Scholars Program, according to the complaint filed in the suit. First Republic Bank collapsed in May due to its having too many uninsured deposits and its failure to keep up with federal interest rates, according to the complaint. The Miller Scholars Program provides selected transfer students from low-income and first-generation college student backgrounds with up to $10,000 in scholarship money over two years. Walnut Creek man arrested after teen fatally shot in botched robbery In addition to financial assistance, the program provides students with mentorship, academic research and...

UC researchers develop new technique to find extraterrestrial life

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:00:48 GMT

UC researchers develop new technique to find extraterrestrial life (BCN) -- The truth is out there -- and researchers at University of California, Berkeley are determined to find it with a new method announced in a scientific journal Tuesday for finding possible extraterrestrial life through radio signals from space. Scientists have long searched for life on other planets through radio signals, but interference from terrestrial radios, cellphones, microwaves and other technologies often lead to false alarms. PHOTOS: Freezer section chained shut in SF Walgreens The new technique, developed by scientists at UC Berkeley's Breakthrough Listen project, verifies that the radio signal they are tracking has actually passed through space, making it easier to filter out false positives. The new detection method was described in an article that appeared in The Astrophysical Journal written by UC Berkeley graduate student Bryan Brzycki, UC Berkeley professor emeritus of astronomy Imke de Pater and Andrew Siemion, the director of UC Berkeley's program to sea...

Brentwood traffic stop leads to drug bust

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:00:48 GMT

Brentwood traffic stop leads to drug bust (KRON) -- Brentwood Police Department officers pulled over a car for expired registration and found a stash of drugs in the vehicle, BPD said Tuesday. Police pulled the vehicle over in the area of Second Street and Brentwood Boulevard. The drugs were easily visible, per police. San Jose PD reveals what triggered police chase Monday In the car, officers found marijuana, heroin, and ecstasy. BPD shared an image of the recovered drugs (above), some of which were being stored in Mason jars. Others were packaged in bags. There were also stacks of cash visible in the police image. Police arrested the driver, 20-year-old Mario Ortiz of Pittsburg. He was booked into the Martinez Detention Facility for possession of drugs and other drug-related charges.

San Francisco rent control loophole closed

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:00:48 GMT

San Francisco rent control loophole closed SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) -- In response to Fillmore residents facing huge rent increases, the San Francisco Board of Supervisors unanimously passed a law Tuesday restoring rent control protections that close a loophole in the city’s rent ordinance.For years, some residents at FD Haynes, a 104-unit affordable housing complex, enjoyed protections provided by rent control, including limitations on how much their monthly rent could increase. After the property owners received city funds in 2020 to make necessary repairs, the owners asserted that residents no longer were protected by rent control, according to supervisor Dean Preston. As a result, some families saw "astronomical hikes," he said."The rent hikes at Frederick-Douglass Haynes are unconscionable," Supervisor Dean Preston said. "No one should have their rent control ripped away without any say."Patricia Beasley has lived with her family at FD Haynes since 1977. After the repairs, they saw their rent jump last July from $1,408 to $...

Atlanta City Leaders Are Subverting Democracy to Save Cop City

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:00:48 GMT

Atlanta City Leaders Are Subverting Democracy to Save Cop City A makeshift memorial for environmental activist Manuel Teran, killed by law enforcement during a raid to clear the construction site of “Cop City,” a police training facility near Atlanta, Ga., on February 6, 2023.Photo: AFP via Getty ImagesThe city of Atlanta is signaling its intention to preemptively invalidate a referendum campaign to stop the construction of a vast police training facility — “Cop City” — on Atlanta forest land.A federal court filing late last week, made on behalf of the city by attorneys from elite Atlanta law firm Bondurant Mixson & Elmore, calls the effort to put a Cop City referendum on the November ballot “invalid” and “futile.” Meanwhile, organizers are still gathering the necessary 70,000 signatures to move forward with the petition.The city’s filing is not a direct challenge to the entire referendum campaign, but it makes clear that Atlanta officials will act to nullify the democratic effort in court, should organizers succeed in getting ...

As Democrats Line Up Behind Israel’s Right-Wing Government, One Progressive Candidate Says He Is Unafraid of AIPAC

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:00:48 GMT

As Democrats Line Up Behind Israel’s Right-Wing Government, One Progressive Candidate Says He Is Unafraid of AIPAC The House of Representatives this week embarked on its semi-regular, bipartisan ritual of pausing legislative business to condemn critics of Israel and celebrate that nation’s virtues. The only twist is that a congressional resolution put up for a vote on Tuesday does less to hail Israel’s more benign qualities, this time focused on rebutting the reality that it is, in its present incarnation, a racist and apartheid state.The latest controversy began on Saturday evening in Chicago at the annual Netroots Nation convention, a gathering of progressive operatives and politicians. During a panel, protesters came for Rep. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., urging her to support legislation that bars Israel from using U.S. funds to detain children. Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., stood up to respond to the protesters and in doing so agreed with their claim that Israel is a “racist state.” As Jayapal later told the New York Times’s Michelle Goldberg, she knew as she walked offstage that she’d step...

NFL are refusing to pay running backs. That reflects the pass-first direction of the league

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:00:48 GMT

NFL are refusing to pay running backs. That reflects the pass-first direction of the league NFL teams are refusing to give running backs lucrative long-term contracts, leaving the best players at the position feeling angry and underappreciated.It’s no surprise the league has reached this point, considering recent trends.The days of “three yards and a cloud of dust” are long gone. The NFL has become a pass-first, quarterback-driven league built around explosive offenses.League rules have changed over the past two decades to enhance scoring. QBs have more protection. Wide receivers have more freedom to roam the field. Defensive players have to be concerned about getting penalized for illegal hits. They can’t go too low. They can’t hit the helmet. They can’t hold. They can’t tug jerseys.The result has been staggering offensive numbers for quarterbacks, wide receivers and tight ends. Running backs — despite their overall value, versatility and responsibilities — are getting left behind.Saquon Barkley, Josh Jacobs and Tony Pollard have to play the 2023 season under the franchis...

Braves catcher Travis d’Arnaud agrees to $8 million deal for 2024

Published Thu, 21 Nov 2024 23:00:48 GMT

Braves catcher Travis d’Arnaud agrees to $8 million deal for 2024 ATLANTA (AP) — Catcher Travis d’Arnaud and the Atlanta Braves agreed Tuesday to an $8 million contract for next year, a deal that includes an $8 million team option for 2025 with no buyout.The 34-year-old d’Arnaud, who has been earning $8 million annually with the Braves since 2020, has joined Sean Murphy in a productive catcher tandem. D’Arnaud is hitting .265 in 38 games with eight homers and 23 RBIs. He set a career high with 18 homers while driving in 60 runs and hitting .268 last year, when he was a first-time All-Star.D’Arnaud earned a Silver Slugger Award in 2020, his first year in Atlanta, when he hit .321 with nine homers.___AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP_SportsSource