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Memorial Day ceremony at Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Memorial Day ceremony at Vietnam Veterans Memorial

Yahoo

time26-05-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Memorial Day ceremony at Vietnam Veterans Memorial

ROCHESTER, N.Y. (WROC) — The Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 20 hosts a ceremony on Memorial Day, to honor the 280 veterans from our area killed in the Vietnam War. Their names are emblazoned on bollards on a winding path in Highland Park and are read aloud during the ceremony. Nine more names of veterans were read aloud; they had no home record when they were killed in the war, and were adopted by the Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 20. Veterans in our area killed during the US War on Terror were also honored. WATCH: Rochester communities hold Memorial Day parades and ceremonies Hundreds of veterans and their family members paid their respects to those who gave the ultimate sacrifice. 'This is real,' said Monroe County Sheriff Todd Baxter, who is an Army veteran. 'These hundreds and hundreds of names behind us, of these Vietnam heroes… They missed beautiful holidays like this and more… They missed being parents, grandparents, a good career, retirement, they missed a lot. And the only way we can thank them is to live like true free Americans, and honor their sacrifice what they gave to us.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

New charges in Winston-Salem stolen car police chase, crash
New charges in Winston-Salem stolen car police chase, crash

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Yahoo

New charges in Winston-Salem stolen car police chase, crash

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (WGHP) — The Winston-Salem Police Department has announced new charges against two of the three men who were taken into custody after a . The chase began at around 6:33 p.m. on Wednesday night on the 1300 block of North Cleveland Avenue. Police say that the suspect driver struck a police car in a vehicle that was reported stolen earlier that day as officers attempted to pull him over. The chase ended when the stolen car crashed into another vehicle at the intersection of East 25th Street and North Jackson Avenue, according to police. The driver and two passengers were then taken into custody. Investigators say that no officers were injured during the pursuit. Two people in the uninvolved vehicle that was struck suffered minor injuries. The three people who were taken into custody also suffered minor injuries. One of the passengers, Jermaine Derelle Stubbs Jr., 25, was charged with possession of a firearm by a felon and possession of a stolen motor vehicle on Thursday. He was also served an unrelated warrant. His total bond was set at $51,000, . Over the weekend, the other two suspects, 21-year-old Aki Jamah Sincere Hannah and 23-year-old Edwin Graciano, were officially charged. Hannah is being charged with felony flee to elude, felony possession of a firearm by a felon, felony possession of a stolen motor vehicle, felony aggravated assault on a government official and numerous Chapter 20 traffic violations. He is being held without bond. Graciano is being charged with felony possession of a firearm by a felon and possession of a stolen motor vehicle and was given a $35,000 unsecured bond. Police say the investigation remains ongoing. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Union members say Jasper County is going to lose deputies
Union members say Jasper County is going to lose deputies

Yahoo

time28-02-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Union members say Jasper County is going to lose deputies

Feb. 28—Union members say Jasper County is going to lose some good deputies on staff after negotiations with the board of supervisors ended at an impasse. Several union employees of AFSCME attended the Feb. 25 board meeting and were displeased with the county seemingly ending labor relations. However, no further negotiations are going to take place, especially after the Jasper County Board of Supervisors passed a resolution for the fiscal year 2026 salary/hourly wages. The resolution states union employees covered under AFSCME and PPME will receive a 4 percent increase to their base wages. Hourly non-bargaining employees and non-department head salaried workers are receiving a 2 percent increase to their base wages. "If this is the best you can and will offer us, I'm just telling you guys on behalf of the sheriff's office and right now what I'm hearing around the office, you guys will lose a lot of good deputies and a lot of solid deputies," one union employee said to the board of supervisors. "And it's going to fall back on you guys." Earlier this month, AFSCME rejected the proposal from the county, which had reduced the union contracts to base wages. In press releases, union leaders called it an "aggressive and targeted attack" that stripped members of their previous contract provisions and workplace protections. Supervisors Chairman Brandon Talsma told Newton News the comments from the union were "grandiose" and "very vague." He also argued many of the workplace protections and provisions have been added — or will be added — to county policy before the start of the new fiscal year. The union disputes this. Craig Keith, president of AFSCME Local 2840, asked the board of supervisors to confirm that negotiations had concluded. Dennis Simon, director of human resources for Jasper County, said they had. Simon referenced an email sent from the county's labor attorney that mentioned this was the last and final offer. "So no counter offer was able to be given?" Keith asked. Simon said, "It was explained when we met that was our best and final (offer)." Collective bargaining rights have been limited ever since the Iowa Legislature made changes to Chapter 20. The state code was stripped down so that the only bargaining topic that can be discussed is wages. Other topics are permissive but whether or not they are negotiated is ultimately up to the individual employer. Before the Iowa Legislature made changes to Chapter 20, Simon said the board was preparing for the worst. At the time, it was thought collective bargaining rights for public employees in Iowa would be eliminated entirely. In 2016, Wisconsin eliminated the ability to have public bargaining in general. "The Iowa statehouse was looking at a very similar situation," Simon said. "They revised Chapter 20 after that. But our board at that time wanted to provide some type of protection if public bargaining was eliminated. So now everything that's in our contract is actually covered under the policy." Union members disputed this and said there are protections in the contract that are not in county policy. Talsma noted in the past seniority rights are not in policy. Simon said there are some specific rights to one area or another, but the county is in the process of drafting additional policies for approval before July 1. "That's exactly what one of the resolutions was on the agenda," Talsma said. Supervisors passed a resolution for longevity and shift differential pay, which affects both bargaining and non-bargaining hourly employees. The resolution provides supplemental pay for years of service. For five years of service, workers get an additional 50 cents per hour, up to $2 per hour for 20 years of service. Adam Swihart of AFSCME Iowa Council 61 said there was no bargaining that took place and he argued the board provided no justification for reducing the contract to base wages. Swihart said he reached out to the county about meeting for another proposal, but by then it was too late. The county's offer was final. "I inquired last week about meeting for another proposal and I was given an email by Mike Galloway, the county labor attorney, that said, 'In case our position wasn't clear, that was our last, best and final, so we have no reason to meet unless we're at an impasse,'" Swihart said. "And that's where we're at." Swihart also disagreed with the union contract being cumbersome and hard to change, saying that no one in the union has come to them to change the contract except for the sheriff's office that had issues that needed addressed. And they were fixed. But the sheriff's office could face even more challenges now. Swihart suggested the sheriff's office will suffer since it has recruitment and retention problems. He said the direction the board is going is disappointing. "But with the way politics work and the way elections work, I guess we should have seen it coming," he said "The employees are frustrated and disappointed." Other union members wanted supervisors to explain themselves and asked if the end goal was to get rid of the unions. The supervisors didn't give an answer.

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