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Paul Bunyan Communications announces March Mania winners
Paul Bunyan Communications announces March Mania winners

Yahoo

time27-04-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Paul Bunyan Communications announces March Mania winners

Apr. 26—Paul Bunyan Communications recently announced the winners of the first-ever Women's Pick-it March Mania Challenge. A total of 405 participants entered the free online contest to pick the winners of the women's college basketball tournament games for a chance to win a credit on a PBC account. Advertisement The top 10 finishers all won a credit on their account. * First place: Christopher White of Bemidji, $500 credit * Second place: Edward Ahrens of Grand Rapids, $250 credit * Third place: Michael Jourdain Sr. of Red Lake, $100 credit * Fourth place: James Picha of Bemidji, $50 credit * Fifth place: Dean Barkey of Park Rapids, $50 credit * Sixth place: Paul Iverson of Bemidji, $50 credit * Seventh place: Scott Schafer of Bemidji, $50 credit * Eighth place: Jerry Miller of Bovey, $50 credit * Ninth place: Chelsea Bush of Bemidji, $50 credit * Tenth place: Jon Berquist of Bemidji, $50 credit * Random prize drawing: Dennis Hensel of Park Rapids, $100 credit

Pope Francis promised 'decisive action' on sexual abuse, but critics say his legacy is complicated
Pope Francis promised 'decisive action' on sexual abuse, but critics say his legacy is complicated

ABC News

time22-04-2025

  • Politics
  • ABC News

Pope Francis promised 'decisive action' on sexual abuse, but critics say his legacy is complicated

When Pope Francis took on the challenge of leading the Catholic Church into a new era in 2013, he said that cleaning up a global sexual abuse crisis was high on the agenda. From In many cases, the victims were children. The worldwide scandal led to a flurry of criminal cases, civil trials and national inquiries, bringing the institution to its knees, amid claims that offenders were moved from parish to parish to Under serious pressure from survivors, prosecutors and the faithful, Pope Francis told his staff to take "decisive action" and ensure perpetrators were punished. In a statement from April 2013, the Holy See press office said Pope Francis told the Vatican watchdog that dealt with sexual abuse cases to bring in measures to "protect minors," to "help those who have suffered" and carry out "necessary procedures against those who are guilty". It was the Argentine Pope's first public statement on clerical sex abuse. In the 12 years that followed, he attempted to reform the church's public image and private attitudes towards abuse and a culture of cover-ups. While some credit him with bringing in unprecedented transparency and accountability, others question whether the pontiff could have done more to shine a light on crimes committed by those he knew. An apology to survivors From Portugal to Belgium, Canada and Chile, Pope Francis met with survivors of abuse to hear their stories and apologise for decades of harm. His first meeting was with six survivors from Ireland, Germany and Britain in July 2014 — 16 months after he was elected. He invited them to visit the Vatican and begged forgiveness for "grave crimes" that were "camouflaged with a complicity that cannot be explained". "What causes me distress and pain is the fact that some priests and bishops, by sexually abusing minors, violated their innocence and their own priestly vocation," he said. " It is something more than despicable actions, it is like a sacrilegious cult. " When a report into sexual abuse in France revealed an estimated 330,000 children had been victim to about 3,000 paedophile priests over 70 years, Francis again apologised on behalf of the church. "I would like to express my sadness, my pain for the trauma that they have endured; and also, my shame for that for so long the Church has been incapable to put this at the centre of its concerns," he said during a General Audience at the Vatican. Francis became adept at offering his apologies during his papacy, but Christopher White, the Vatican correspondent for the US-based National Catholic Reporter, said his words didn't always translate into action. Some survivors say they did not feel that Pope Francis did enough to address systemic abuse within the Church. ( Pacific Press/LightRocket/Getty Images: Andy Katz ) "Victims still regularly complain that there is little transparency on their cases once complaints are filed with the Vatican and an investigation begins," White said. "Often survivors wait months and years to hear back on the status of their cases and receive very little communication from Vatican departments about what is happening." Pope Francis promised 'concrete measures' In his first year as pope, Francis broadened the definition of child abuse in Vatican City and made it punishable by up to 12 years in prison. Photo shows Pope Francis The leader of the Catholic Church Pope Francis has died. The Argentinian Jesuit oversaw one of the most tumultuous periods in the Church's modern history. He also set up a panel of experts to advise him on how best to tackle the insidious problem. But it wasn't until February 2019, that he called a four-day summit to address the crisis and establish what he called "concrete measures" to tackle it, beyond mere "condemnation". The Meeting on the Protection of Minors in the Church was unprecedented and involved almost 200 global Catholic leaders. "The idea was to get them on the same page and to say firstly, abuse is rampant throughout the church and it's not just a problem in the Western world and two, to outline clear protocols for reporting abuse, and critically, its cover-up," White said. Pope Francis set out 21 "reflection points" for attendees, which included recommendations for handling cases of alleged abuse, and a practical handbook to be given to dioceses outlining steps they must take. Later that same year, he abolished the rule of "pontifical secrecy" in cases of clergy abuse, so it could no longer serve as a loophole to protect paedophiles, silence victims and prevent police investigations. In June 2021, the Vatican announced sweeping changes to laws pertaining to clergy sexual abuse cases, bringing about the most extensive revision of the Code of Canon Law in four decades. "This resulted in the strongest new laws to date to hold priests and bishops accountable — but talking to almost any survivor of abuse one will quickly see that regardless of the clear rules on paper, there's a steep learning curve in enacting these reforms," White said. Vatican correspondent for Catholic news publication Crux, Elise Ann Allen says Pope Francis took the issue of clergy sexual abuse "very seriously" and did more than any pontiff before him to reform the church. "He issued new norms and they now enforce mandatory reporting … they target bishops who are negligent in abuse cases, who cover up, so it's not just the abuse but the cover-up," Allen said. "He tried to go after abusers and he defrocked people, so he did take it seriously." But Allen says there are several big cases that Francis got wrong. Francis accused of siding with some abusers One such case is that of Chilean bishop, Juan Barros. On a visit to Chile in 2018, Francis publicly defended the bishop, who was accused of being present when another priest molested young boys, but failed to report it. Juan Barros was accused of witnessing an instance of child sexual abuse and doing nothing about it. ( AP: Mario Mendoza Cabrera ) Francis told Chilean reporters the accusation amounted to "slander", "The day they bring me proof against Bishop Barros, then I will speak. There is not a single piece of proof against him. Everything is slander, is this clear?" the pontiff said. After staunch public backlash, including from cardinals within his own ranks, the pontiff sent the Vatican's top expert on sexual abuse to Chile to investigate the allegations. Hundreds of Chileans took to the streets to protest against Bishop Barros in 2015. ( Reuters: Carlos Gutierrez ) Four months later, Francis accepted Barros' resignation and, Pope Francis' biographer Austen Ivereigh says it's an incident the pontiff would have looked back on with regret. "He simply realised he had been duped," Ivereigh said. "The information he had been given was wrong, when he realised there was corruption and he acted and he said sorry in a very deep way, but also acted very, very swiftly to deal with the problem." Crux Vatican correspondent Elise Ann Allen says this wasn't the only time Francis was accused of siding with perpetrators. "A fellow Argentine bishop whom he had been friends with, Gustavo Zanchetta, had been accused of sexual misconduct with seminarians, and the Pope had sided with him and then got very quiet about things as the civil trial went forward, and eventually that bishop was jailed," Allen said. Allen said "big questions remain" about the case of the Jesuit Father Marko Rupnik, who is accused of abusing over 40 adult women, most of whom were nuns. "He was a fellow member of the Jesuit order, like Pope Francis, and as we came to find out there had been a lot of missteps behind closed doors," she said. "The big question was, what did Francis know? How involved was he?…What influence did he perhaps have, or what pressures were there, because they were both Jesuits? "Those are questions that were never answered and so those are questions that are going to be attached to him and that will go down in history as things that maybe he made big mistakes on and could have done better." The women said they were subjected to sexual, psychological or spiritual abuse at the hands of Rupnik. While Rupnik has never publicly commented on the allegations, His 'complicated relationship' with Pell Pope Francis imparted the final blessing for Australian Cardinal George Pell during his funeral service at St Peter's Basilica in 2023. Francis had appointed Pell to his council of cardinals shortly after he was elected, and then to the newly created role of Secretariat for the Economy, giving him authority over all economic and administrative activity within the Holy See. It was the most senior post an Australian Catholic cleric had ever held. Pope Francis had a complicated relationship with George Pell, experts say. ( Supplied: Vatican News ) In 2019, Pell was imprisoned in Melbourne on child sexual abuse charges, though he was acquitted of 13 months later. While he was under investigation by police, Francis allowed Pell to continue residing in the Vatican, and he returned to Rome after his convictions were quashed. "Francis had a complicated relationship with George Pell," White said. "He appreciated his business acumen and he also never believed Pell was guilty of the crimes of which he was accused and eventually exonerated. "But the two men couldn't be more different in terms of how they viewed the church. Pell believed the church should position itself against the world as a safeguard of tradition … Francis' disposition is one of openness and dialogue toward the modern world." Australian victims of child sex abuse by the Catholic Church travelled to Rome to watch Pell testify as part of a sexual abuse inquiry in 2016 and had requested an audience with Pope Francis while they were there. Their request wasn't granted, and at the time the Vatican said that decision was made because the Australian delegation hadn't used the proper channels. Pope Francis died just hours after attending the Palm Sunday Mass in Saint Peter's Square. ( Reuters: Yara Nardi ) On the day Pope Francis died, the Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests (SNAP) said the tragedy of his papacy was "a preventable catastrophe for the children and vulnerable people who were abused during his tenure". "The next pope must do what Francis refused: enact a universal zero tolerance law for abuse and cover-up," "Because of his history of covering up abuse in Argentina, Francis never possessed the necessary credibility to overhaul the Vatican's management of sexual abuse cases. "The next pope must not have any history of having covered up sexual abuse."

'Maverick' Pope Francis defied doctors to meet followers before dying hours later
'Maverick' Pope Francis defied doctors to meet followers before dying hours later

Daily Mirror

time21-04-2025

  • General
  • Daily Mirror

'Maverick' Pope Francis defied doctors to meet followers before dying hours later

Pope Francis defied the orders of his doctors to rest in the months after he was taken ill in February and hours before his sudden death was meeting with people for Easter Sunday Pope Francis continued to defy the order of his doctors to rest in the months leading up to his death, as he was said to believe being with people was his 'best medicine'. The world has reacted with grief to news that the Pontiff passed away at around 7.30am today, after struggling with his health for several months. On Sunday afternoon the leader of the Vatican church blessed thousands of visitors to St Paul's Square as he made a surprise appearance in a trip in the Popemobile for Easter Sunday. His death hours later follows claims by experts that he was a 'maverick' who felt it was his duty to be with people. ‌ Christopher White, Vatican correspondent for the National Catholic Reporter, told the Guardian last month: 'If you think back to when he was elected pope and decided to forgo the traditional vestments and to live in Casa Santa Marta, he came in as a maverick - now, at 88, and after a very serious hospitalisation, he continues to be a maverick. 'He really does believe being with people is the best medicine. As a pastor, he has a duty to be out and public-facing, but I also think there's a political calculation. 'He's politically astute and would have read the papers and all the endless speculation about his health, possible resignation and conclave.' The Pope had been told to rest for at least two months after he was discharged from hospital, but he repeatedly denied those orders. ‌ Before visiting St Paul's Basilica for the final time on Sunday, the Pope posted on X. He said in his last message: 'Christ is risen! These words capture the entire meaning of our existence, for we were not made for death but for life.' Cardinal Kevin Ferrell, the Vatican camerlengo, announced the sad news the Pope passed away at around 7.30am. He said: "Dearest brothers and sisters, with deep sorrow I must announce the death of our Holy Father Francis. At 7.35am, the Bishop of Rome, Francis, returned to the house of the Father. "His entire life was dedicated to the service of the Lord and of His Church. He taught us to live the values of the Gospel with fidelity, courage, and universal love, especially in favour of the poorest and most marginalized. With immense gratitude for his example as a true disciple of the Lord Jesus, we commend the soul of Pope Francis to the infinite merciful love of the One and Triune God." On March 13, 2013, he became pope at the age of 76, succeeding Pope Benedict XVI, the first pope in 600 years to resign from office.

Oak Street to get major bike-friendly redesign by summer 2026
Oak Street to get major bike-friendly redesign by summer 2026

Axios

time04-04-2025

  • Automotive
  • Axios

Oak Street to get major bike-friendly redesign by summer 2026

In an effort to improve safety for bicyclists and pedestrians, Oak Street will be getting a major redesign that is expected to be completed by next summer. State of play: The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency earlier this week approved the $1.3 million "quick build" project to create a protected eastbound bike lane with a wide buffer separating it from vehicles. The 0.8-mile project along Oak Street between Stanyan and Baker streets, which was created as part of the city's Vision Zero safety initiative, will mirror the westbound-running Fell Street redesign. That has led to a 38% drop in roadway collisions and 50% drop in pedestrian crashes, according to the SFMTA. By the numbers: The major thoroughfare along the Panhandle has been a hazardous roadway for years. The stretch between Cole and Baker represents 12% of streets that account for 68% of the city's severe and fatal traffic collisions, SFMTA data shows. What they're saying:"Oak Street has been on the high Injury network in San Francisco for a long time. This is a step in the right direction," Christopher White, executive director of the San Francisco Bicycle Coalition, told Axios. Between the lines: The renovation entails repaving the corridor, removing a traffic lane, painting "safety zones" and installing concrete islands. 23 parking spaces along Oak Street will also be removed, 18 of which will be taken out between Ashbury and Masonic streets to make way for two left-turn lanes. The remaining five spaces will be removed on Baker Street between Fell and Oak to allow for the curbside bikeway into the Panhandle. An additional 26 parking spaces will be removed throughout the area due to California's new daylighting law. Yes but: While the project is expected to create a safer path, Luke Bornheimer, who is the executive director of Streets Forward, says that the proposed design would make it "inconvenient" for cyclists since the bike lane would cross into the Panhandle just west of Masonic Street. "Ironically, that would encourage people on bikes to ride on the paths used by people walking in Panhandle," he said. The organization is advocating for the SFMTA to approve the project and "upgrade the design to keep the bikeway in the roadway for the entirety of the project area," Bornheimer added. What's next: The first phase of the project, which involves adding a new traffic signal and constructing the bikeway is expected to be completed late this year with it fully operational by summer 2026.

Oconomowoc's Olympia Fields may get two new restaurants: First Watch and Chipotle
Oconomowoc's Olympia Fields may get two new restaurants: First Watch and Chipotle

Yahoo

time13-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Oconomowoc's Olympia Fields may get two new restaurants: First Watch and Chipotle

OCONOMOWOC - A property owner has set the table for the addition of two new restaurants at the base of Oconomowoc's blossoming Olympia Fields development area. A portion of the massive residential development including what was once Olympia hotel and resort land west of Summit Avenue includes a segment set aside for commercial development. If plans hold, the 1.89-acre commercial spot will split into two separate lots — one for a new Chipotle Mexican Grill and the other for a less familiar restaurant brand called First Watch. That tidbit emerged from a March 5 meeting of the city's Plan Commission, which considered a certified survey map with the lot split just north of Pabst Drive by the project manager, Christopher White for RA Smith, and property owner Cory Presnick, of Miami. According to city documents, the lot is in the process of being sold to Presnick for commercial development. Olympia Fields LLC and Majers LLC were listed as the current property owner applicants on a March 5 city planning report and other documents focused on the restaurants themselves. The Common Council must approve the lot split before any plans can proceed. It's expected to consider the matter March 18. Chipotle, obviously, is a well-known brand, with nearly 10,000 locations in the U.S. alone, plus dozens more in Canada, Great Britain and France. It has 10 Milwaukee-area locations and 30 in Wisconsin. It would open a 2,300-square-foot restaurant on a new 0.7-acre lot at 1299 Olympia Fields Drive. First Watch, on the other hand, is a 500-location chain that has been expanding into the Milwaukee metro area only in recent years, beginning in Brookfield in 2011 and Pewaukee shortly thereafter. The Florida-based breakfast-brunch-lunch café chain, open from 7 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. daily, now has four locations nearby. It would open a 3,800-square-foot restaurant on a new 1.2-acre lot at 1295 Olympia Fields Drive. An opening date is not expected to be announced until plans are finalized. No building permits will be issued until the certified survey map is signed, Oconomowoc City Planner Jason Gallo said. The latest plans come on top of the city's recent approval for a Panera Bread location in that same segment of Olympia Fields. That proposal, originally approved in 2022, re-emerged last summer in a slightly different location, with an Olympia Fields Drive address, not Summit Avenue. It's expected to open in latter half of this year. The broader Olympia Fields development area is led by developer Wangard Partners. It includes apartments and commercial lots, including the redevelopment of the old Kmart building, which now includes a Sendik's supermarket and other businesses. That commercial collection of businesses neighbors the Panera, Chipotle and First Watch restaurant properties. Contact reporter Jim Riccioli at This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Plans for two new restaurants at Olympia Fields in Oconomowoc

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