-3.6 C
Philadelphia
spot_img
Inicio Blog Página 1056

Editorial Roundup: Pennsylvania

storm

LNP/LancasterOnline. April 9, 2023

Editorial: U.S. Sen. Fetterman’s transparency about his mental health issues will do a lot of good

Fetterman’s Senate campaign staff was not very transparent about the stroke that took him off the campaign trail for much of last summer.

His detailed medical records were not released. Voters didn’t learn about the lingering auditory processing issues caused by the stroke until September.

The former lieutenant governor has chosen a different — much more candid — approach regarding his mental health struggles.

When he checked himself into Walter Reed, his chief of staff revealed in a statement that Fetterman had “experienced depression off and on throughout his life,” but it had become “severe in recent weeks.”

And the news release about his discharge from Walter Reed noted the use of medication therapies to treat his depression. It also noted his improved mood, “brighter affect and improved motivation, self-attitude, and engagement with others” as those and other therapies began to have an effect.

We learned that Fetterman had “expressed a firm commitment to treatment over the long term.”

We also learned that hearing tests had identified Fetterman’s significant hearing loss and that he was fitted with hearing aids. This revelation was in itself a public service. Research has shown that hearing loss can increase a person’s risk of developing a mental health disorder such as depression. And men, in particular, often are unwilling to wear hearing aids.

In the statement, Fetterman expressed gratitude to his treatment team at Walter Reed. “The care they provided changed my life. … I want everyone to know that depression is treatable, and treatment works. This isn’t about politics — right now there are people who are suffering with depression in red counties and blue counties. If you need help, please get help.”

This transparency may do more good than any legislation Fetterman ever will see passed in the Senate.

According to Johns Hopkins Medicine, an estimated 26% of Americans ages 18 and older — about 1 in 4 adults — suffers from a diagnosable mental health disorder in a given year.

More than half of adults with a mental illness do not receive treatment, and nearly 60% of youths with major depression do not receive any mental health treatment, Mental Health America tells us. While mental health disorders are common, they are often not diagnosed; this leads to the kind of quiet despair with which Fetterman wrestled for years.

As was widely reported in articles about Fetterman, depression affects about a third of stroke survivors. Now, hopefully, more family members of stroke victims will know to watch carefully for signs of depression in their loved ones.

A previous history of depression — which Fetterman had — is a predictor of post-stroke depression, Dr. Nada El Husseini, an associate professor of neurology at Duke University, told the American Heart Association.

Research has shown that men often are reluctant to seek treatment for mental health disorders, including major depression.

According to Mental Health America, more than 6 million men in the United States suffer depression each year, but male depression often goes undiagnosed, and men often downplay their symptoms. Social norms — including the expectation that they should just “man up” — discourage men from seeking help.

Fetterman has dispelled the notion that men should shoulder their mental health burdens silently.

He’s not the first to have done so, of course. Actor Dwayne (“The Rock”) Johnson publicly disclosed his mental health struggles several years ago, and tweeted in April 2018 that “depression never discriminates. Took me a long time to realize it but the key is to not be afraid to open up. Especially us dudes have a tendency to keep it in. You’re not alone.”

But Fetterman’s candor, especially in an interview with CBS “Sunday Morning” anchor Jane Pauley last Sunday, has been impressive.

He revealed that in the weeks after his election to the Senate, he had “stopped leaving my bed. I had stopped eating. I was dropping weight. I had stopped engaging some of the, most things that I love in my life.” Including family time.

He recalled an “incredibly sad moment” when his 14-year-old son couldn’t understand why he wouldn’t get out of bed. He spoke emotionally of his sadness at checking himself into Walter Reed on that son’s birthday. He wasn’t harming himself, but he said he felt “indifferent” to living.

Now, after treatment, he told Pauley, he feels hopeful for “the first time. … It’s a strange feeling for me to have.”

We wish everyone experiencing mental health issues had access to the intensive inpatient treatment Fetterman, as a senator, received at Walter Reed. We hope Fetterman takes that on as a legislative goal.

In the meantime, help is available, so please seek it if you need it.

If your employer has an employee assistance program, be assured that it is against federal law for that program to disclose to your employer any information you share, unless you give your signed consent.

If your employer does not have an employee assistance program, Mental Health America of Lancaster County may be able to help. Call 717-397-7461 or email mha@mhalancaster.org for information. The Steinman Foundation has worked with that nonprofit to provide mental health services to families in Lancaster County since the pandemic. (The Steinman Foundation is a local, independent family foundation that was funded by the companies that make up Steinman Communications; those companies include LNP Media Group.)

Also, the Touchstone Foundation offers assistance toward copays or deductibles on mental health services for youth, children and parents of dependent children who live in Lancaster County and have financial need. The Steinman Foundation also provides funding for that program. Learn more at touchstonefound.org or by calling 717-397-8722.

Resources also may be available to you through the county’s mental health program; call 717-393-0421.

And please know that there is absolutely no shame in seeking mental health treatment.

GET HELP

This editorial mentions mental health issues. If you or someone you know is in crisis and needs immediate help, contact the following organizations:

— National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, suicidepreventionlifeline.org, 800-273-8255. (Also, 988 has launched nationally as the new three-digit dialing code that will route callers to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.)

— Those who are deaf or hard of hearing can contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline via TTY at 800-799-4889.

— Lancaster Crisis Intervention, 717-394-2631.

— If you are LGBTQ: thetrevorproject.org/get-help.


Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. April 8, 2023

Editorial: Drop death penalty: Lengthy trial, appeals of synagogue mass shooter would delay justice and traumatize survivors

The U.S. Department of Justice should respect the wishes of some of the survivors of the mass shooting at a Squirrel Hill synagogue and withdraw its request for the death penalty. A death-penalty trial for the Oct. 27, 2018, massacre of 11 Jewish worshipers would delay justice and drag congregants and their community through years of anguish.

In securing a death-penalty conviction and defending it on appeals, the government would, in effect, re-enact the worst case of anti-Semitic violence in U.S. history through witness testimony, media coverage and appeals that could continue for up to 20 years.

Congregation Dor Hadash has urged U.S. Attorney General Merrick Garland to abandon the government’s quest for the death penalty and accept a plea deal for a mandatory life sentence, including an agreement with defense attorneys that the accused 50-year-old killer would waive his right to appeals. For the government to disregard the yearning of congregants to heal in peace would be callous and cruel, and violate the sacred tenets of the faith that has sustained them.

Justice has already been delayed for too long. The trial is scheduled to start with jury selection on April 24, four and a half years after the murders. Some delays were unavoidable, such as the retirement of U.S. Judge Donetta Ambrose in 2022. Now, however, the chief impediment to a timely salve of justice is the Justice Department’s unreasonable demand for the death penalty.

Death-penalty trials require more expert witnesses, investigations and evaluations. They contain automatic rights to appeal. Jury selection is more complex. These and other procedural protections apply to all defendants in capital cases. Without them, innocent people would die. Since the United States re-instated the death penalty in 1976, more than 180 death-row prisoners have been exonerated due to wrongful convictions, including 11 in Pennsylvania.

Death penalty arbitrary

The government’s call for the death penalty in the case of the Pittsburgh synagogue shooter is arbitrary and immoral. During the 2020 campaign, President Joe Biden pledged to end the federal death penalty, and his Justice Department has not sought it in cases similar to the murders at Tree of Life synagogue. In January, for example, federal prosecutors did not seek the death penalty for a man accused of killing 23 people in a racist attack at a Texas Walmart in 2019.

Even the most ardent supporters of a federal death penalty would agree that it needs to be applied with consistent standards. The U.S. Justice Department has none. Mr. Biden’s call for ending the federal death penalty now appears to have been nothing more than a campaign tactic to shore up support among progressive Democrats.

Capital punishment, a futile and medieval cry for vengeance, is on its way out. Given the practical, moral, economic and social problems with the death penalty, seven states have abolished it since 2009, bringing the total number of states without a death penalty to 23.

Pennsylvania has a death-penalty statute, but the state placed a moratorium on executions in 2015. In February, newly elected Gov. Josh Shapiro, a former death penalty supporter, called on state legislators to abolish the death penalty. In doing so, he cited, among other events, his conversations with the Jewish survivors of the mass shooting in Pittsburgh who opposed the death penalty.

Agonizing publicity

A high-profile trial would give the accused killer a sickening notoriety that would unleash extraordinary pain. In a March 18 editorial on the 10.27 Healing Partnership at the Jewish Community Center of Greater Pittsburgh, sources asked the newspaper’s editorial page editor to omit the name of the accused shooter to avoid sensationalizing, promoting or validating him. (The newspaper did not name the shooter and has not done so here.) Given that level of sensitivity to any notoriety given the shooter, the government should consider the effects on the victims from the overwhelming publicity of a sensational and lengthy death-penalty trial.

For the sake of those who have suffered most, we beg the Justice Department to withdraw its call for the death penalty. Far better that it accept a plea deal for a mandatory life sentence and let the accused killer languish in an anonymous cell for the remainder of his days. If he ever grows a conscience — and he might — the enormity of his deeds will curse his every breath and confine him to a living hell, far worse than any death sentence.


Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. April 8, 2023

Editorial: Pa. Legislature should see Tennessee expulsions as cautionary tale

The Pennsylvania Legislature is no stranger to dissension.

The state isn’t Democratic or Republican, after all. It isn’t even a muddled, muted purple. It is a patchwork of red and blue by county and city. That pattern is repeated in the House and Senate chambers.

And that can lead to mulish opposition. It can mean obstinate obstruction. It can even result in explosive outbursts during legislative sessions.

That has happened more than once in Harrisburg.

In June 2019, state Sen. Katie Muth, D-Montgomery County, continued to loudly read a constituent’s letter over the objections of then-Senate Majority Leader Jake Corman, who shouted his protests to then-Lt. Gov. John Fetterman. That ugly and chaotic exchange made national news.

On Jan. 5, 2021, another outburst came when Fetterman and Corman clashed over the seating of Jim Brewster when now-Westmoreland County District Attorney Nicole Ziccarelli was contesting the vote count in their close race for the 45th District.

But in Tennessee on Thursday, three Democratic House members were put up for expulsion, charged with participating in a “disorderly” demonstration with throngs of young protesters in the wake of The Covenant School shooting in Nashville. Two of them — the two youngest members of the House, both men of color — were voted out. The third — a white woman and former teacher — survived by one vote.

If there wasn’t already dissension between left and right in Tennessee, between guns, abortion and LGBTQ issues, this has pushed the idea of not just fighting political opposition but kicking them out of the conversation. The GOP lawmakers insist the move was just about rules of decorum, not debate.

Now, there are questions about whether what happened in that state House could spread to others.

Pennsylvania has removed lawmakers in the past — rarely. However, when it has happened, it has generally been because of criminal activity. We should all agree that is appropriate.

But the Keystone State should never be ashamed of having differing opinions. It should never seek to squelch the thoughts of the other side.

Our government is built on not just the representation of the people but also on the exchange, development and full-throated debate of ideas. It makes the laws better and the state better. It even makes the parties better.

We don’t want shouting matches and disrespect. We don’t want disregard of the rules. But the rules encourage everyone having a say and everyone participating in the process. The Pennsylvania Legislature — and every government body in the state — should watch what happened in Tennessee and resolve to be better.


Uniontown Herald-Standard. April 9, 2023

Editorial: Non-compete agreements should be eliminated

A couple of years ago, state Sen. Camera Bartolotta was championing a measure that would do away with noncompete agreements for individuals who work in radio or television in Pennsylvania. The Carroll Township Republican believed that career opportunities and wage growth are stifled when on-air or production personnel are tethered to one outlet or one market for a fixed period of time after a job ends.

The bill made a lot of sense. But the whole idea needs to be taken a step further — workers in all industries in all states should not be locked into noncompete agreements.

That could very well happen if a new rule being considered by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) takes effect. The FTC announced the proposed change in January and public comment is being taken through April 19. The agency argues that doing away with unfair deals that prevent employees from moving on to greener pastures will jump-start wage growth, mobility and opportunity. It’s a solid argument, but it’s also a matter of fundamental fairness: In a free-market economy, where most employees offer their skills, time and labor to an employer, they should be able to make their services available to someone else offering better compensation or conditions.

After all, most employers have the right to hire and fire at will. Brendan Lynch, an employment attorney at Community Legal Services of Philadelphia, put it this way in the Pennsylvania Capital-Star: “The one benefit to workers for at-will employment is the freedom to leave a job and seek work anywhere else. The huge increase in noncompetes takes away even that illusion of parity: workers can be fired at any time, without cause, but new jobs in their fields are off- limits.”

Proponents of noncompete agreements say they have invested time and money in training and talent, and don’t want to see it poached. But rather than being confined to industries like software engineering or sales, where employers might have a legitimate desire to hold onto their trade secrets, noncompete agreements have been used for hairdressers, janitors, nurses, veterinarians, warehouse workers and fast-food workers. Of the 18% of U.S. workers who are subject to noncompete agreements, 30% work for less than $13 per hour. The FTC has estimated that noncompete clauses prevent 30 million American workers from putting $300 billion in their wallets.

A better course of action for employers would be to use or strengthen nondisclosure agreements, rather than put employees in a position where they could be penalized if they seek work in the same field elsewhere.

Also, according to Silas Russell, the political director of SEIU Healthcare Pennsylvania, “The best way for an employer to keep a worker is to offer wages and benefits those workers deserve, not threaten to sue them for seeking a better opportunity.”


Wilkes Barre Citizens’ Voice. April 10, 2023

Editorial: State policy penalizes working class

Pennsylvania lawmakers regularly give away the store to wealthy interests. The theory is that it’s necessary to compete with neighboring states for development that benefits everyone through economic activity and job creation.

Perhaps the flagship example is the $6 billion Shell petrochemical refinery in Beaver County that the state government has subsidized with a record $1.7 billion in tax credits.

If that model works, though, lawmakers need to explain the finding by the government’s nonpartisan Independent Fiscal Office that low-income Pennsylvania workers are paid less and taxed more than their counterparts in surrounding states.

That flows from state policy. Pennsylvania is the only state in the Northeast that continues to cling to the $7.25 hourly minimum wage that Congress implemented in 2009. New Jersey’s hourly minimum wage is $14 and New York’s is $15. And a New York Federal Reserve study conducted several years ago demonstrated that the higher New York wage has not adversely affected businesses in New York that border Pennsylvania.

Pandemic-induced labor shortages have put upward pressure on wages, but the higher minimums elsewhere mean that thousands of Pennsylvanians still work for much less than their counterparts with comparable jobs in surrounding states.

And the state government, which has begun a multi-year plan to reduce the corporate net income tax by more than 50%, from 9.99% to 4.9%, continues to maintain a flat personal income tax rate that penalizes low-income workers.

The flat personal income tax rate is 3.07%, which is toward the lower end of the range among the 43 states and the District of Columbia that impose such taxes. But because the Pennsylvania rate is flat, the effective tax rate for working class people in New York, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, West Virginia and Ohio is lower, according to the IFO.

Democratic state Sen. Art Haywood of Montgomery County asked for the study. As he put it, “Pennsylvania punishes those earning under $30,000 with the highest taxes and lowest minimum wage.”

Lawmakers compound that injustice by failing to fairly fund public schools and badly shortchanging higher education.

When pondering economic policy, legislators need to include a bottom-up perspective before relentlessly passing incentives from the top, down.

END

Arráez batea para el ciclo; Marlins derrotan a Filis

El venezolano Luis Arráez anota por los Marlins de Miami frente a J.T. Realmuto, de los Filis de Filadelfia, el martes 11 de abril de 2023 (AP Foto/Matt Rourke)

Luis Arráez se convirtió en el primer pelotero de los Marlins de Miami en batear para el ciclo, al conectar de 5-4 con un jonrón, dos carreas anotadas y dos impulsadas el martes, en la victoria por 8-4 sobre los Filis de Filadelfia.

Antes del martes, los Marlins eran el único club activo en las mayores que no tenían a ningún jugador que hubiera completado el ciclo alguna vez. Debutaron en la Liga Nacional como los Marlins de Florida en 1992.

“He tenido a mucha gente que me ha ayudado a trabajar duro cada día”, comentó Arráez. “Quiero dedicar esto a mi familia, incluida mi esposa, quien espera a nuestro bebé”.

Arráez ganó el título de bateo de la Liga Americana en 2022, con un promedio de .316, como miembro de los Mellizos de Minnesota, que lo cedieron el 20 de enero a los Marlins mediante un canje que involucró a cuatro peloteros.

El venezolano ha bateado de 41-22 (.537) en los 12 primeros juegos de la campaña de 2023. Se trata del mayor promedio de bateo para cualquier pelotero en los primeros 12 juegos de una campaña desde 2000, cuando Frank Cattalanatto ostentó un .600.

“Me siento saludable. Yo sabía que si estaba saludable este año podría hacer muchas cosas”, dijo Arráez.

Luego de conectar un doble en el primer acto y añadir un triple al jardín derecho en el sexto, Arráez logró un jonrón en el séptimo, para dar a los Marlins algo de comodidad, luego que su ventaja se había reducido de cuatro carreras a una.

En la octava entrada, Arráez bateó un sencillo a la pradera izquierda ante el relevista Andrew Bellatti, para empujar a Jazz Chisholm con la última carrera de la noche.

La victoria fue para el venezolano Jesús Luzardo (2-0), quien laboró seis episodios, en los que aceptó tres carreras y ocho hits.

Aaron Nola (0-2) admitió cuatro carreras limpias y cinco inatrapables en cinco innings y dos tercios.

Por los Marlins, el venezolano Arráez de 5-4 con dos anotadas y dos producidas. Los cubanos Jorge Soler de 5-1 con una anotada y una producida, Yuli Gurriel de 5-2 con dos anotadas y una remolcada. Los dominicanos Bryan de la Cruz de 4-0, Jean Segura de 5-2.

Por los Filis, el panameño Edmundo Sosa de 3-0. El dominicano Christian Pache de 2-1.

Solido pero declinante

Fotografía de archivo que muestra una serie de billetes de dolar. EFE/RAYNER PEÑA R.

 La creación de empleo en Estados Unidos en marzo fue sólida, pero a una tasa declinante. La Oficina de Estadísticas Laborales dijo el viernes pasado que en marzo fueron creados 236,000 nuevos empleos, menos que más de 300,000 creados en febrero y menos que medio millón en enero. Marzo fue el vigésimo séptimo mes consecutivo de creación de empleo, con más de 1 millón de puestos de trabajo creados hasta ahora, durante el primer trimestre de este año. La tasa de desempleo disminuyó de 3.6 por ciento en febrero a 3.5 por ciento, mientras que el promedio del salario por hora llegó a 4.2 por ciento, el aumento más débil desde 2021, todavía debajo de la tasa de inflación.

Las cifras de creación de empleo divulgadas la semana pasada no reflejaron el impacto de la turbulencia en algunos bancos regionales de mediados de marzo, la cual será incluida en el próximo informe programado para el 5 de mayo. Eso sucederá después de la próxima reunión del Comité de Mercado Abierto del banco central, calendarizada para el 2 y 3 de mayo. No obstante, según la Bolsa Mercantil de Chicago, los mercados a futuros anticipan 70 por ciento de probabilidad que el banco central aprobará otro aumento de 0.25 por ciento en la tasa de interés de los fondos federales. 

Solid but declining

Fotografía de archivo que muestra una serie de billetes de dolar. EFE/RAYNER PEÑA R.

Job creation in the United States in March was solid, but at a declining rate. The Bureau of Labor Statistics said last Friday that 236,000 new jobs were created in March, less than more than 300,000 created in February and less than half a million in January. March was the 27th month of consecutive job creation, with more than 1 million jobs created thus far, during this year’s first quarter. The unemployment rate decreased from 3.6 percent in February to 3.5 percent, while average hourly earnings slowed to 4.2 percent, the weakest increase since 2021 and still below the rate of inflation.

Those sectors most sensitive to high interest rates lost jobs, such as retail 14,600, construction 9,000 and manufacturing 1,000. By contrast, leisure and hospitality added 72,000 jobs, education and health 65,000, business services 39,000 and even the government hired 47,000 new workers.

The job creation figures released last week did not yet reflect the impact of the mid-March turbulence among some regional banks, which will be included in the next report, due on May 5. This will happen after the next meeting of the central bank’s Open Market Committee, scheduled for May 2-3. However, according to the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, futures markets anticipate 70 percent chance the central bank will approve another 0.25 percent increase in the federal funds interest rate.     

Condenado por vender casi 3 millones de números de beneficiarios de Medicare

(Foto: EFE/Jeff Scheid/Archivo)

Un hombre residente en el condado de Palm Beach (Florida) fue condenado a cerca de cuatro años de cárcel por comprar y vender más de 2,6 millones de números de identificación de beneficiarios de Medicare (el sistema de salud pública), informó este martes la Fiscalía Federal del Distrito Sur del estado.

Charles William McElwee, de 36 años, se había declarado culpable de los cargos que se le imputaban, entre otros el de «conspirar para comprar y vender números de beneficiarios del Medicare».

Como parte de su declaración de culpabilidad, McElwee admitió que él y sus cómplices utilizaron «técnicas de minería de datos» y de «ingeniería social» para recopilar información de los beneficiarios de Medicare, que McElwee luego publicitó y vendió en línea.

La información traficada incluía nombres de beneficiarios, direcciones, fechas de nacimiento, números de seguro social y números de identificación de beneficiarios de Medicare, señaló el comunicado de la Fiscalía.

Según la acusación, algunas de las transacciones ilícitas involucraron a extranjeros, incluidos vendedores en Filipinas y compradores en Egipto.

La Fiscalía instó a los beneficiarios de Medicare que creen que han sido víctimas del robo de identidad médica a presentar una queja en la línea directa proporcionada por Medicare.

Temple University names ex-dean, provost as acting president

JoAnne Epps. (Photo: File)

PHILADELPHIA. — Former Temple University law school dean and provost JoAnne Epps has been named acting president of the university. She vowed to focus on safety and enrollment amid spiraling crime near the north Philadelphia campus and other issues during her predecessor’s tumultuous tenure of less than two years.

Epps, who has spent nearly four decades at the university, told The Philadelphia Inquirer before the announcement that she believes she was selected in part for her “ability to sort of calm waters.” The newspaper reported that enrollment is down 14% since 2019.

“I am obviously humbled and excited and really looking forward to being able to make a contribution to the university that I so love,” Epps said in an interview with the paper. She said she will not be a candidate for the permanent position as the university launches a national search for a new president.

Jason Wingard, Temple’s first Black president, resigned last month after leading the 33,600-student university since July 2021.

Wingard, 51, resigned shortly before a no-confidence vote by the faculty union, with members citing concerns over falling enrollment, financial issues and labor disputes. He had told a panel of state lawmakers a week earlier that Philadelphia’s homicide rate has wrought a climate in which students, faculty, parents and staff are afraid.

In announcing his resignation, the school vowed to ensure “the highest level of focus” on serious issues facing the institution, “particularly campus safety.”

Temple University police officer Christopher Fitzgerald, 31, was shot and killed near campus earlier this year after pursing three people dressed in black and wearing masks in an area where there had been a series of robberies and carjackings. Two youths were arrested nearby, and an 18-year-old suspect was taken into custody the following morning. The school said Fitzgerald, a father of five, was the first Temple University officer killed in the line of duty.

The university had also recently seen a six-week strike by graduate students who are teaching and research assistants. Members of the graduate student union last month ratified a new contract after overwhelmingly rejecting an earlier agreement and extending their walkout.

Entrenador del Philadelphia Union advierte que ventaja ante Atlas es engañosa

El entrenador de Philadelphia Union, Jim Curtin, dirige a su equipo durante entrenamiento previo al partido contra Atlas por los cuartos de final de la Liga de Campeones Concacaf hoy, en el estadio Jalisco. (México). EFE/ Francisco Guasco

Guadalajara (México)- El estadounidense Jim Curtin, entrenador del Philadelphia Union, dijo este martes que la ventaja de su equipo ante el Atlas es engañosa por lo que deberá desplegar un juego inteligente y una defensa agresiva en los cuartos de final de la Liga de Campeones de la Concacaf.

«Peleamos mucho por tener una ventaja de 1-0, pero entendemos que no es un marcador seguro cuando estás jugando en un estadio difícil como el de Guadalajara contra un oponente de calidad como Atlas», dijo en conferencia de prensa.

Los estadounidenses visitan al Atlas este miércoles en el partido de vuelta de la serie de cuartos de final, con la intención de repetir el triunfo por marcador de 1-0 con el que se impuso en casa en el duelo de ida para lograr el pase a la semifinal del torneo.

El técnico afirmó que la línea defensiva es la base de su estilo de juego y en este compromiso deberá ser «proactiva y agresiva pero no reactiva» para evitar darle espacios al Atlas.

«Nuestra base sigue siendo la defensa, pero aún pensamos que habrá instancias en las que Atlas empuje hacia adelante tratando de marcar un gol y en el que tal vez podamos golpearlos en el contraataque. Así que espero un gran partido», indicó.

El argentino Daniel Carranza, delantero del Union, aseguró que su equipo no debe conformarse con mantener el gol de ventaja sino que desplegará su juego para poder complicar al rival.

«No vamos a desesperarnos y tratar de marcar un solo gol y quedar mal parados o algo así, vamos a salir a jugar nuestro partido y sí se da el gol, bienvenido sea, pero bueno, si no vamos a seguir trabajando para mantener el cero en nuestro arco», indicó.

Carranza afirmó que los jugadores del Atlas tienen una buena preparación física pero cometen errores al intentar cubrir espacios, un aspecto en el que su equipo puede tomar ventaja.

«Si bien son fuertes físicamente en la línea de atrás, también no son tan rápidos para cubrir los espacios, así que intentaremos buscar los costados de los centrales, las espaldas y tratar de sacar provecho de esos espacios. Vamos a tratar de no entrar tanto en ese juego», concluyó.

El peso de los latinos en EE. UU. añade relevancia a los medios en español

Ricardo Trotti (d), director ejecutivo de la Sociedad Interamericana de Prensa (SIP), habla junto a Mabel Caballero, presidenta de la Asociación de la Prensa de Cádiz, y el director ejecutivo de la Cámara de Comercio España-Estados Unidos, Juan Carlos Pereira (i), durante la inauguración de las Jornadas sobre periodismo en español en Estados Unidos hoy en Miami, Florida (EE. UU). El peso demográfico de los latinos en Estados Unidos provoca una creciente importancia de los medios en español que sirven a un grupo que influye ya en todo el conjunto del país, según directivos de las principales empresas hispanas de difusión. EFE/Marlon Pacheco

El peso demográfico de los latinos en Estados Unidos provoca una creciente importancia de los medios en español que sirven a un grupo que influye ya en todo el conjunto del país, según directivos de las principales empresas hispanas de difusión.

La directora de CNN en Español, Cynthia Hudson, dijo este martes a EFE que la importancia de los latinos en EE. UU. provoca que el castellano «siga creciendo» en importancia en los medios, aunque ese proceso se lleve a cabo «conviviendo con el inglés».

Hudson participó hoy en Miami (Florida) en un foro sobre la influencia del periodismo en español en EE. UU. que contó con directivos de Univision, Telemundo, El Nuevo Herald de Miami y La Opinión de Los Ángeles.

El evento estuvo organizado por la Asociación de la Prensa de la ciudad española de Cádiz (APC) con el respaldo de la Sociedad Interamericana de Prensa (SIP) y pone el colofón al IX Congreso Internacional de la Lengua Española celebrado en marzo en Cádiz.

Hudson participó en el primer panel, moderado por la vicepresidente de la ACP, Mabel Caballero, y titulado «¿Ha logrado el periodismo en español la aceptación y el reconocimiento del público y la prensa de EE. UU.? de la jornada «Periodismo con Ñ.

Según dijo, «la temática del periodismo hispano interesa en Estados Unidos ya a quien no es parte de la cultura latina».

EL ESPAÑOL GANA PESO

Sostuvo que, de hecho, «CNN en español cada vez cobra más importancia» en el conjunto de la empresa, por lo que aumentan los periodistas bilingües en las coberturas.

Ese proceso demográfico, en su opinión, hará que los medios de EE. UU. en el futuro «tengan que apelar a la población latina, ya sea en español o en inglés».

El presidente de Noticias Univisión, Leopoldo Gómez, señaló que ve «con optimismo a los medios hispanos de cara al futuro».

Gómez sostuvo que la importancia creciente de los latinos en EE. UU. no solo consolida a los medios en español, sino que, en su opinión, hay todavía «mucho camino por recorrer respecto a la presencia hispana en medios en inglés».

Reconoció que ese peso creciente se ve acompañado por un público hispano para medios como Univision que, sin embargo, «cada ves es más bilingüe».

El director editorial de La Opinión de Los Ángeles, Armando Varela, mantuvo que, aunque, sin duda, el periodismo en español gana peso en EE. UU. se trata, dijo, de un nicho no reconocido por igual por toda la sociedad.

El panel lo cerró la periodista de El Nuevo Herald de Miami Sonia Osorio que destacó que desde su periódico se hace un esfuerzo diario por informar a la población latina, pero además con ofrecer noticias que «contribuyan a preservar los vínculos con sus países».

CAMBIOS DIGITALES

El segundo panel, «Adaptación de los medios tradicionales en español de EE. UU. a los cambios digitales. ¿Saldrán más fortalecidos o perderán fuerza?», estuvo moderado por Ricardo Trotti, director ejecutivo de la SIP.

La directora del Diario Las Américas de Miami, Ileana Labastida, señaló que su periódico ha hecho los deberes en el campo digital y que aunque el papel sigue, una vez a la semana, siendo una referencia llegó a recibir más de 255.000 visitas en una semana.

El director editorial de Americano Media de Miami, Manuel Aguilera, dijo que en su medio se cumple positivamente en el campo digital pero que es complicado al tener que dar respuesta a un mercado latino «muy fragmentado».

Marta Planells, periodista de Noticias Telemundo, destacó que desde la cadena se ha dado el salto al mundo digital, tras matizar que la tendencia que encuentran es un público cada vez más bilingüe.

Rafael Cores, vicepresidente de Contenidos Digitales de Impremedia, cerró el panel al señalar que es importante que los medios estén cada vez con mayor presencia en las redes sociales.

El foro sigue al organizado por Asociación de la Prensa de Cádiz en las ciudades marroquíes de Tánger y Tetuán, además de la paralela al IX Congreso Internacional de la Lengua Española de marzo en Cádiz.

Suit: Chocolate maker ignored natural gas alert before blast

Emergency personnel work at the site of a deadly explosion at a chocolate factory in West Reading, Pa., March 25, 2023. According to a lawsuit filed Tuesday, April 11, a Pennsylvania candy-maker ignored warnings of a gas leak at its chocolate factory and bears responsibility for a subsequent explosion that killed seven workers. (Photo: AP/Ben Hasty/Reading Eagle/File)

A Pennsylvania candy-maker ignored warnings of a natural gas leak at its chocolate factory and bears responsibility for a subsequent explosion that killed seven workers and injured several others, according to a lawsuit filed Tuesday.

The family of Judith “Judy” Lopez-Moran, a 55-year-old mother of three, filed what their lawyers called the first wrongful-death suit against R.M. Palmer Co. after the March 24 blast in West Reading.

Workers smelled natural gas that day and notified Palmer, but the 75-year-old, family-owned company “did nothing,” the lawsuit said.

“The gas leak at the factory and the horrific explosion it caused was foreseeable, predictable, and preventable,” the suit said. “Tragically, Judith Lopez-Moran’s death and suffering were preventable.”

The lawsuit, filed in Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas, also names gas utility UGI, which declined comment. A message was sent to Palmer seeking comment.

Authorities are still investigating the cause of the explosion, which leveled a building in the factory complex and damaged several other buildings in West Reading, a small town 60 miles (96 kilometers) northwest of Philadelphia.

 Emergency personnel work at the site of a deadly explosion at a chocolate factory in West Reading, Pa., March 24, 2023. According to a lawsuit filed Tuesday, April 11, a Pennsylvania candy-maker ignored warnings of a gas leak at its chocolate factory and bears responsibility for a subsequent explosion that killed seven workers. (Photo: Jeff Doelp/Reading Eagle/File)

Federal safety officials previously confirmed they were studying the role of a natural gas pipeline in the blast. The National Transportation Safety Board has called what happened a natural gas explosion and fire, citing preliminary information from local authorities and the utility about the pipeline.

Palmer officials should have evacuated immediately after being told of the natural gas odor but instead “made a representation to the factory workers, including Judith Lopez-Moran, that the factory was safe and that there was no gas leak,” the suit said.

Palmer, according to the suit, “intended to mislead the factory workers … so that the factory workers would continue working and so that factory downtime would be minimized.”

Patricia Borges, who survived the blast and was a friend and co-worker of Lopez-Moran, previously recounted how her arm caught fire as flames engulfed the building. She then fell through the floor into a vat of liquid chocolate. Borges told The Associated Press how she and others had complained about a natural gas odor about 30 minutes before the factory blew up.

Emergency personnel work at the site of a deadly explosion at a chocolate factory in West Reading, Pa., March 25, 2023. According to a lawsuit filed Tuesday, April 11, a Pennsylvania candy-maker ignored warnings of a gas leak at its chocolate factory and bears responsibility for a subsequent explosion that killed seven workers. (Photo: AP/Michelle Lynch/Reading Eagle/File)

Palmer has offered condolences but has otherwise said little since the explosion.

The law firm representing Lopez-Moran’s family, Saltz Mongeluzzi Bendesky, said it represents more than a dozen victims of the explosion.

The firm’s investigation, in part, will seek to determine whether UGI’s meters had signaled a leak in the pipeline and whether soil around the pipeline was discolored, indicative of a gas leak, said the family’s attorney, Andrew Duffy.

“We hope to use the lawsuit to find out exactly what our family wants us to find out, which is what happened, who should be held accountable, and most important to them, how to prevent this from happening to any other family ever again,” Duffy said in an interview.

Bohm has 6 RBIs, Phillies power past Alcantara, Marlins 15-3

Philadelphia Phillies' Alec Bohm rounds the basses after hitting a three run home run off of Miami Marlins' Devin Smeltzer during the sixth inning of a baseball game, Monday, April 10, 2023, in Philadelphia. (Photo: AP/Matt Rourke)

PHILADELPHIA. Bryson Stott and the Phillies play coy when asked exactly what they’ve learned through the years that turns Miami’s Sandy Alcantara from ace to — especially in his latest start — awful against the NL champs.

“I think it’s just staying focused and trying to get the right pitch against him,” Stott said.

Whatever the methodology, the Phillies are to blame for one of the worst outings of Alcantara’s 133 career starts.

Alec Bohm homered and tied a career high with six RBIs and the Philadelphia Phillies tagged the 2022 NL Cy Young Award winner for nine runs in a 15-3 win over the Miami Marlins on Monday night.

Brandon Marsh and Jake Cave added solo homers, and the Phillies pounded out 20 hits.

Alcantara (1-1) had pitched a 1-hour, 57-minute shutout in his last start against Minnesota, then struggled to get anyone out in Philadelphia.

Alcantara scuffled with a 1-3 record, 3.16 ERA last season against the Phillies, and it seems as if the NL champs have figured something out against the Marlins’ ace.

“Maybe we just see him better than other teams,” Phillies manager Rob Thomson said.

The Phillies have won eight of their last 10 games against the Marlins when Alcantara starts. Alcantara has lost seven times to the Phillies since the start of the 2021 season.

“Something happened quick out there,” Alcantara said. “They know I throw a lot of strikes. Maybe they said this guy throws too many strikes, let’s swing the bat. They make a lot of hard contact, soft contact. It’s part of the game.”

The Phillies pounded him for five runs in the third inning and four more in the fifth — whopping totals considering Alcantara did not allow more than six runs in a game in 32 starts last season.

Cave, claimed off waivers in December, rocked a solo homer off the second-deck facade in right to lead off the fourth for a 1-0 lead. Alcantara retired the next two batters.

Then the bats got hot. The Phillies have been searching for power with injured sluggers Bryce Harper, Rhys Hoskins and Darick Hall sidelined for parts or all of this season. Without them, the Phillies hit just seven homers in the first nine games.

Against Alcantara, they didn’t really need the 400-footers.

Stott singled, stole second and scored on Trea Turner’s single. Turner stole second, Kyle Schwarber walked and Nick Castellanos banged an RBI double to left for a 3-0 lead. Alec Bohm added a two-RBI single for a 5-0 lead and Brandon Marsh doubled, making it six straight Phillies to reach base with two outs against Alcantara.

Small ball style.

Castellanos and Bohm added run-scoring singles in the fifth and they each scored on Marsh’s double off reliever Devin Smeltzer. That closed the book on Alcantara. His nine runs allowed in four-plus innings were the most in a start by a reigning Cy Young Award winner since Detroit’s Max Scherzer gave up 10 against Kansas City in 2014. Perhaps Alcantara can take solace in the face that Scherzer won 18 games that season.

Matt Strahm (1-0) struck out six in five scoreless innings for the win.

Bohm added a three-run shot in the sixth, Marsh went deep in the eighth and the Phillies cruised to their third win in four games.

TAKE A LICKING

Smeltzer took one for the team. He allowed six runs and five hits in four innings meaning, yes, the Marlins only used two pitchers in a game in which they allowed 15 runs.

LEADING OFF

Hitting .429 to start the season, Thomson shifted second baseman Stott to the leadoff spot. Turner was bumped to second and Schwarber hit third. Stott singled in the third and extended his hitting streak to 10 games.

Thomson didn’t say if the move was permanent.

“I’ve always thought he kind of fits the mold of a leadoff guy,” Thomson said. “He sees a lot of pitches. He knows the strike zone. He sees the field, he can hit, gets on base.”

OUTTA HERE

Castellanos was tossed in the seventh by plate umpire John Libka over a disagreement on a called third strike. Castellanos thought the pitch was inside and pointed his bat at the dirt, prompting the ejection.

WELCOME BACK

The Phillies presented an NL championship ring to former second baseman Jean Segura. Segura, who batted seventh and played third base for the Marlins, spent four years with the Phillies and won Game 1 of the NL wild-card series with a two-run, single in the ninth inning against St. Louis.

Segura had played 1,328 career games before making his postseason debut.

“Jean was the guy that wanted to play every day,” Thomson said. “He played hard. He cared a great deal about winning. That’s all he wanted to do was win and he finally got a taste of it last year.”

UP NEXT

The Marlins send LHP Jesus Luzardo (1-0, 0.71 ERA) to the mound against Phillies RHP Aaron Nola (0-1, 7.45 ERA).