Michigan judge rules to end on-street dining in downtown Northville

By Heath Kalb

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    Michigan (WWJ) — Restaurants in downtown Northville, Michigan, will need to permanently remove on-street dining setups by Saturday, following a new court ruling issued on Wednesday.

The city says it is disappointed by the ruling but that it will comply and have all of the dining platforms along Main and Center streets taken down by the deadline. The ruling states that restaurants in the downtown area cannot use cement barricades to block off parallel parking spaces for street dining anymore.

This comes after a years-long fight by the nonprofit group Let’s Open Northville to close down on-street dining. The group first filed a lawsuit in October 2023.

“This ruling today established what all attorneys know to be the case, which is that we have to follow judge’s opinions and orders,” said Kyle Konwinski, an attorney for the nonprofit.

The seasonal closure from May until November occurred seven days a week and was part of the city’s outdoor dining and social district season, which had been in place since the COVID-19 pandemic. At the time, residents understood why the idea was initially proposed, but some locals believe it is now an inconvenience.

Konwinski says Judge Charlene Elder’s ruling owes to the history of Northville.

“The two main streets in the city of Northville were created by a plat. This plat was created, the people who gave their property to the city intended those roads to be used for traffic and on-street parking,” said Konwinski.

The city and many residents have expressed frustration over the ruling,

“I like it outside, I am disappointed,” said Michael Strong.

The city of Northville released a statement saying in part-

The City of Northville and Downtown Development Authority (DDA) are disappointed with today’s court ruling in favor of the emergency motion filed by Let’s Open Northville, which requires the removal of permitted on-street dining in Downtown Northville.

While the City believed it had fully complied with the court’s earlier order to reopen Main and Center Streets to vehicular traffic, this latest decision impacts long standing outdoor dining that has been permitted, inspected, and approved for more than a decade. On-street dining has supported small businesses, helped activate public space, and contributed to a vibrant, walkable downtown that residents and visitors deeply value.

This mid-season removal disrupts operations for our downtown restaurants, many of which have invested in staffing, supplies, and infrastructure based on established policies and permits.

While we respectfully disagree with the court’s decision, the City will comply fully with the ruling and will remove on-street dining by October 4, 2025. The City will have to temporality shut down the streets to remove the concrete barriers that are in place as safety precautions for on street dining. The City and DDA will work closely with impacted businesses to help navigate this transition in a timely manner.

We remain committed to advocating for our business community and will continue to explore every avenue to maintain a thriving downtown district that reflects the values and needs of the Northville community.

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Bronx partial building collapse has some residents scared to return. Here’s the latest on the investigation.

By Christina Fan

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    NEW YORK (WCBS) — A dramatic partial building collapse that sent bricks crumbling nearly 20 stories Wednesday in the Bronx remains under investigation.

Remarkably, no one was hurt. Still, many residents say other ongoing safety issues in the NYCHA high-rise need to be addressed.

A safety fence now surrounds the collapse zone in a courtyard at the Mitchel Houses on Alexander Avenue in the Mott Haven section.

City agencies continue their cleanup and inspection efforts, as they try to pinpoint the cause of the explosion that led an entire corner of the high-rise to collapse Wednesday morning. Officials said the force came from the boiler room and sent shockwaves up the chimney.

The city says 38 apartments were issued vacate orders, and more than 140 residents were relocated out of an abundance of caution. Gas has also been shut off for the entire complex.

“October 1st is when the city turns on the heat. So there was an individual downstairs who was turning on the system,” Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Kaz Daughtry said Wednesday night. “This is an investigative theory that the pilot, before it was lit, caused this incident to happen.”

Other residents who have been cleared to stay in their homes say they aren’t sure they want to. Many said the building has a laundry list of other safety issues.

“I’m very scared. I want to know what’s going to happen with the rest of these buildings, because I hope it’s not, you know, the same condition,” one resident said.

“It’s sad that we, as New Yorkers, we have to go through this,” said resident Tania Cruz. “We never expect for something to happen like this. Going through it is just like, what’s next?”

According to city records, the building at 205 Alexander Avenue has two active violations from the Department of Buildings dating back to 2020 for unsafe facades. The most recent is from February 2024.

A group of residents plans to hold a rally Thursday morning, calling on Gov. Kathy Hochul to provide NYCHA with the funding to maintain and upgrade their buildings to prevent events like this from happening.

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Statue of slain 10-year-old Barway Collins missing from Twin Cities park

By WCCO Staff

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    CRYSTAL, Minnesota (WCCO) — The memorial statue for 10-year-old Barway Collins, which has stood in Becker Park in Crystal, Minnesota, for only about a year, is now missing.

Collins was murdered in 2015 by his father, Pierre Collins, who is now serving a 40-year prison sentence.

WCCO spoke last year with Barway Collins’ mother, Karluah Owens, who said her son loved to play at Becker Park. She said the statue gives her and Barway Collins’ siblings a place to feel his presence.

“I feel happy to see my son’s memory will stay alive,” Owens said.

This is the fourth reported theft of a public statue this year in Minnesota. In August, someone stole a bronze bust of Olympic gymnast Suni Lee from St. Paul’s Phalen Regional Park. The granite plaque was later found in a nearby lake, but the bust is still missing.

This is the fourth reported theft of a public statue this year in Minnesota. In August, someone stole a bronze bust of Olympic gymnast Suni Lee from St. Paul’s Phalen Regional Park. The granite plaque was later found in a nearby lake, but the bust is still missing.

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Dallas family pushes for a cure for Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy

By Trevor Sochocki

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    DALLAS (KTVT) — By most accounts, Shepherd Riddle is the typical 11-year-old boy — his grandma loves him and he likes exactly what you would expect. But it’s what he doesn’t like that you might not expect.

“I don’t like the attention at all,” said Shep, as his family and friends call him, who gets a lot of it at school. “It just annoys me, that every day I’m asked, ‘Hey, why do you need a wheelchair?’ ‘Hey, why can you stand if you have a wheelchair?'”

Once he’s in his wheelchair, his diagnosis becomes more obvious — he has Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, a disease that weakens the muscles over time.

“They get stiff,” he explained. “And tired.”

It’s not just the arm and leg muscles either, making actions like walking or going up stairs difficult — the heart and lungs weaken over time, too.

“It was annihilating, because there’s no cure,” said Kate Miner Moebel, Shep’s grandma, of the day the family found out about the diagnosis. “It’s fatal.”

The median life expectancy is only into the late twenties.

So, when that gut-punch of a life-altering event came into Shep’s family, Moebel had to decide what her role would be.

“What I decided was, I will carry the hope,” she said. For her, this means finding the beauty in every day.

“The beautiful is who Shep is,” Moebel said. “Without a disease. Irregardless.”

“Having this event is just an expression of me carrying the hope for Shep,” said Moebel. “And for 300,000 other little boys and young men.”

And that’s not the only reason to smile — life expectancy has increased in the last decade.

“There are beautiful things happening around us in medicine,” Moebel explained.

One of those things is the CureDuchenne clinic in Denton. It provides care to underserved and uninsured people with Duchenne.

“I think it’s good that we’re trying to find the cure,” Shep said.

CureDuchenne’s second annual Champions in Dallas fundraiser is on Oct. 2 with all proceeds from the event going back to the clinic.

On Thursday night, the nonprofit CureDuchenne will be hosting its second annual Champions in Dallas fundraiser.

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Church leaders say they were never contacted before ICE agents arrested 4 people outside Bronzeville shelter

By Jermont Terry

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    CHICAGO (WBBM) — South Side community leaders are sharing their fears and frustrations after a new round of ICE arrests on Wednesday outside a Bronzeville shelter

The people detained become part of the more than 800 arrested in “Operation Midway Blitz.”

As Homeland Security touts the hundreds of arrests since the operation started, those running the shelter are insisting that the way ICE agents moved in was over the top and unnecessary.

Security surveillance caught the moments federal ICE agents in SUVs pulled up outside a homeless shelter in Bronzeville. Agents were seen jumping out, and people started running as agents followed.

“But there were, probably again, 20 that they chased,” said Bright Star Community Development Corporation executive director Caryl R. West.

Bright Star Church runs the former migrant shelter, which is now converted into a 260-bed homeless shelter. Despite having the names of everyone who stays in there, church leaders say Homeland Security never contacted them to see if who they were looking for was registered.

“They would’ve given us an opportunity to help identify those individuals. We could have, in fact, let them know if they were here or if they were maybe at work,” said executive director Lakreshia Kindred.

The agents never entered the shelter, but church leaders, once they discovered what was going on, came out.

Bright Star’s pastor, Chris Harris, took to social media to sound the alarm.

Church leaders understand that federal agents are carrying out the mission, but argue that the way ICE is going about detaining people is cruel and unnecessary

“What they’ve portrayed is not really how things are being executed, and if what they’re saying is true, there’s a way to do it with peace and dignity.”

“They didn’t show us the respect to come to our facility to come and communicate with us,” said West.

Church leaders said ICE arrested four people, but say the way this was done has left all of those here uneasy.

“We brought them here to provide shelter, and now they feel as if though they don’t have any shelter,” West said.

There is no word of anyone getting injured during the arrests. Operation Midway Blitz started back on September 8.

CBS News Chicago reached out to ICE about the incident, but has yet to hear back.

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Woman accused of burning church, threatening to kill pastor and his wife, arrest warrant says

By Christopher Harris

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    AUSTELL, Georgia (WUPA) — A woman is facing multiple felony charges after a fire destroyed Eagle’s Chapel Church in Austell Monday night, authorities said.

Austell is located about 17 miles west of Downtown Atlanta, in Cobb County.

Investigators said Aries Maliah Jordan not only set the blaze but also sent text messages threatening to burn the church and kill the pastor and his wife, according to an arrest warrant.

Austell Fire Chief Brandon Merritt confirmed to CBS News Atlanta that Jordan was arrested late Tuesday. He said more details about the case are expected to be released soon.

The church’s lead pastor, Raphael Grant, described the moment he found out.

“I received a call from one of my leaders asking me, ‘What happened? Is everyone okay?’ She told me the church is on fire, it’s on the news,” Grant said. “I was lying in bed. I just jumped out of bed and drove to the church premises and lo and behold, the church was on fire.”

Grant said firefighters and police were already on the scene, but the damage was beyond repair.

“As a matter of fact, the entire building, 20,000 square feet, is completely in rubble. There is nothing,” he said.

The fire is a painful blow to the congregation. Three years ago, the church was heavily damaged by flooding and had only recently reopened.

“We just finished rebuilding because of the flood. Everything in the building was brand new, and now everything is gone,” Grant said. “For now, this coming Sunday, we will be having the service in front of the church, outside at 10 a.m. We also have a GoFundMe account, and we really need financial help at this moment.”

Justice Asante, head of media for Eagle’s Chapel, called the church a cornerstone of the community.

“This is the house of God. I’ve been here for 10 years now,” Asante said. “We had early devastation of water damage, but we were able to get back. As soon as we came back, this is the second year, but unfortunately the fire destroyed the building.”

Despite the loss, Asante said the congregation’s faith and unity remain strong.

“The atmosphere here is electrifying. It’s an amazing place to have worship. We welcome everybody that comes from all parts of the world,” he said. “The building is one aspect of it, but the church is the people. You can’t destroy the church of God. So we are gathering ourselves together to continue on.”

Court documents from the Magistrate Court of Cobb County accuse Jordan of starting the fire at the church on Joe Jerkins Boulevard between 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. on Sept. 29. The building was completely destroyed in the flames.

The warrant lists several felony charges against Jordan, including first-degree arson, burglary, vandalism of a place of worship, criminal damage to property, possession of tools for the commission of a crime, and making terroristic threats.

Investigators also said a plastic container of ignitable liquid was found at the scene. The church’s pastor told authorities the container did not belong to the church.

Jordan is also accused of entering the building without permission and intentionally setting the fire, which authorities say could have endangered lives.

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Caribbean cruise passengers upset itinerary was changed to Boston and Maine due to hurricanes

By Mike Sullivan

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    BOSTON (WBZ) — Passengers aboard a Norwegian Cruise Line ship are in port in Boston attempting to take in the sights, despite being originally bound for the Caribbean. The Norwegian Escape changed course due to Hurricane Humberto and Hurricane Imelda. Passengers say they weren’t given much notice.

“They didn’t give us an itinerary change or anything 24 hours in advance, and it’s very chaotic because people don’t want to be here,” said Adrian Miller, a Nassau native who didn’t pack for this type of trip. “Then you tell us we have to call this 800-number? Hold on, we didn’t sign up for this. We didn’t pay for this. I understand there is a storm, but you should give people a preference to change to another trip at future date on a further notice.”

Passengers told WBZ some of them didn’t know until they arrived at the ship in New York City and were handed a piece of paper with the itinerary change. They say they were not updated about the change on their app either. They will now head from Boston to Portland and Eastport, Maine.

“They didn’t really announce it. Some people didn’t really know, which kind of sucked,” said youngster Juliann Montague. “It’s sad, but not that sad, because we would have been in hurricanes and we might have been in a lot of danger.”

“I packed for the Caribbean. That’s why I had to go buy this,” said Jocelyne Nemorin pointing to her “Boston” sweatshirt. “Do you know how many layers I have? I have three or four layers?”

In a statement, a Norwegian Cruise Line spokesperson had this to say:

“The safety and security of our guests, crew and the communities we visit are always a top priority. Due to the projected paths of Tropical Storm Imelda and Hurricane Humberto in the Atlantic, the itineraries for Norwegian Aqua and Norwegian Escape have been modified. Norwegian Aqua’s current voyage, which departed New York City on Sept. 27, 2025 will no longer call to Bermuda, but instead will visit Portland, Maine; Boston; and St. John, New Brunswick. Norwegian Escape’s Sept. 29, 2025 sailing, will no longer cruise to the Caribbean. Instead, she will call to Boston; Portland and Eastport, Maine; and is scheduled to call to Bermuda next week. We will continue to monitor the storms to ensure there are no impacts to the modified itineraries. Additional updates will be provided as appropriate.”

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San Marcos boys water polo edges Buena in Channel League clash

Mike Klan

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT)- San Marcos boys water polo got defensive against Buena in a 10-7 Channel League game.

The Royals held the Bulldogs to just two goals in the second half as goalie Titus Fernandez totaled 8 blocks in the game.

Offensively San Marcos was led by Christian Yonker who had 3 goals while Pepperdine-commit Will Stuart and Jake Magid added two goals apiece.

(Will Stuart converts the penalty shot in the first quarter).

The Royals jumped out to a 4-1 first quarter lead but trailed 5-4 at the half.

The reigning Channel League champion Royals are now 2-0 in league.

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UCSB men’s soccer gets back into win column

Mike Klan

FULLERTON, Calif. (KEYT). – The winless streak is over. The UC Santa Barbara Men’s Soccer team turned in a stout defensive performance to hold on to a 1-0 lead at Cal State Fullerton and win their Big West opener. Buba Fofanah scored again, Owen Beninga kept another clean sheet, but for the first time this season, they did both in the same game. Most importantly, the Gauchos finished, and not just in front of goal. While Beninga will get credit for the shutout (which he deserves), the defensive corps in front of him — Haruki Utsumi, Drew Kamienski, Calle Mollerberg, Eddie Villeda, Jacob Blach and Colby Renton — each put in tremendous shifts to keep all 17 of the Titans shots out of the net.

HOW IT HAPPENEDThe hosts had control of the match through the first 10 minutes as Santa Barbara had to weather an early storm. In the first two minutes, the Titans had a shot blocked, another bounce off the crossbar and a third go wide left. While Fullerton managed five shots in the first 10 minutes, only one required saving, and it was a largely tame effort.

And after the 10th minute, it was the Gauchos who started to take more and more control. They crafted enough of a threat to win back-to-back corner kicks in the 12th minute, then Steinar Bjornsson and Fofanah had shots blocked within a minute of each other. Santa Barbara continued to knock at the door, winning a couple more corners and seeing another shot from Bjornsson blocked. In the 22nd minute, they should have had a tap-in after Calle Mollerberg split the Titan defense with an incisive pass for Bjornsson to run on to, allowing the Icelander to play a pass across the face of goal, where both Fofanah and Thomas Noordegraaf were racing to meet it. Unfortunately, neither could put a toe on the ball to direct it goalwards.

In the 27th minute, the Gauchos finally broke through. Villeda played another deft through ball for Zac Siebenlist, who raced to meet it before it crossed the endline. The sophomore pulled a pass back for Fofanah arriving at the front post, only to see his shot saved at close range from the Titan goalkeeper. However, the Gauchos were clearly due a break. The rebound from the initial save bounced right back off of Fofanah and into the back of the net, putting Santa Barbara on top.

While the Gauchos maintained a comfortable hold on the game after the score, they had to manage a few issues. In the 32nd minute, the Titans worked their way into a one-on-one with Beninga, but Villeda made a great recovery to get in the way before the Fullerton player could get a shot off. In the 45th minute, just 15 seconds before halftime, the Titans had a shout for a penalty kick, but the referee ruled (and upheld after VAR review), that Blach’s tackle was fair.

With a lead at the break, the Gauchos dug in and spent the majority of the second half soaking up pressure, looking to hit the Titans on counterattacks where they could while the defense worked to maintain the lead. Their best opportunity for a second goal came in the 67th minute, less than 60 seconds after the Titans had been forced to change goalkeepers, but Siebenlist’s shot was denied by the new netminder in what was the save of the evening.

As it turned out, the Gauchos had no need for a second goal, as the defense did its job. The Titans took nine shots in the second half but managed to put only one of them on target, which Beninga saved comfortably. The reigning Big West Freshman and Defensive Player of the Week showed off his trademark aerial dominance a couple of times in the second half, either catching or punching away corner kicks, but the 45-minute stand was largely orchestrated by the back line in front of him. Of the eight second-half shots that Beninga did not have to save, four were blocked by the Gauchos.

BY THE NUMBERSWith three clean sheets in as many appearances, Beninga now ranks fourth in The Big West for shutouts on the season. The two players next ahead of him have taken 10 games to collect their four.Wednesday night’s victory was the 20th in conference openers for Tim Vom Steeg as head coach of the Gauchos.Wednesday was also Vom Steeg’s 23rd career victory over fellow Big West coaching legend George Kuntz. Since Kuntz took over the Titans in 2025, Vom Steeg’s Gauchos are 7-3-3 against them.

UP NEXTSanta Barbara returns to Harder Stadium for their first home conference match of the season on Saturday, hosting UC Riverside at 7 p.m. The Highlanders suffered a heartbreaking 1-0 defeat in their conference-opener on Wednesday night, falling to a late CSUN goal. The Gauchos have not lost to the Highlanders on home soil since 2017. Tickets for Saturday night’s match are on sale now at ucsbgauchos.com/tickets, and fans can catch all the action from anywhere by watching live on ESPN+.

(Courtesy UCSB Athletics).

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Cal Poly wins Big West opener in men’s soccer

Mike Klan

SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (KEYT). – Senior defender Nico Baltazar scored his first goal of the year in the 51st minute and junior forward Sean McTague produced the game winner four minutes from full time as the Cal Poly men’s soccer program opened Big West play Wednesday evening with a 2-1 victory against UC Davis in a nationally-televised matchup on ESPNU.

Senior goalkeeper Nicky McCune chalked up three first-half saves for Cal Poly (4-3-3, 1-0-0), which extended its unbeaten run to six successive matches. Opening defense of its 2024 Big West regular season title with three points, Cal Poly also stretched its program record unbeaten streak at Mustang Memorial Field to 13 successive matches.

McCune recorded all three of his saves inside the opening 17 minutes and the Mustangs nearly broke through in the 24th before senior midfielder Bakuena Ramakatsa’s backheel flick outside the penalty area sailed wide of the left post.

It was the Aggies though who notched the opening goal in the 49th minute with defenders Gavin House and Andrew Dutra combining to set up forward Chase Tanon.

The Mustangs, however, equalized less than three minutes later as defender Michael Vick picked out Baltazar from the corner as Cal Poly’s defender scored with his first shot attempt of the season.

Cal Poly placed six of 13 shot attempts on target and was whistled offside nine times before McTague produced the game-winning goal in the 86th, firing outside the right post and into the left corner following an assist from junior midfielder Jackson Miller.

The Mustangs resume Big West play at UC Irvine on Saturday, Oct. 4. Kickoff is 6 p.m.

(Article courtesy of Cal Poly Athletics).

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