NHL partially reverses decision on players using ice time to support LGBTQ+ community

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The NHL has dropped a mandate that its players cannot express support for groups or causes during on-ice warmups before games, the league said in a statement released on Tuesday.

The decision came three days after Coyotes defenseman Travis Dermott became the first player to defy the NHL’s edict played with Pride Tape on the shaft of his stick during Arizona’s 2-1 victory over Anaheim.

“After consultation with the NHL Players’ Association and the NHL Player Inclusion Coalition, Players will now have the option to voluntarily represent social causes with their stick tape throughout the season,” the league said in a statement released on social media and the league’s media site.

The decision is only a partial reversal of a policy that prohibits players from wearing pride jerseys in games or during warmups, as some teams have done, on Pride Night or Hockey is for Everybody Night. That’s still the case, but initially, the league told teams that players could not use ice time to express their support for any cause in any way, which included using Pride Tape to show support for the LGBTQ+ community.

The league bundled that decision into a wide-ranging ban on all on-ice “cause messaging,” but it was clear the edict was aimed at LGTBQ+ support after the league and players had to answer questions about why a handful of players refused to wear Pride Night jerseys.

The decision was criticized by some players and support groups, including Twin Cities Pride, one of many groups to work with the Wild on the team’s inclusion initiatives.

“The Wild have been a great ally,” TCP executive director Andi Otto told the Pioneer Press after news of the NHL’s decision broke this month. “This isn’t a Wild thing. We realize this is the NHL stopping it, not the Wild.”

Dermott told the Athletic’s Chris Johnston on Tuesday that he did it because there are some people who don’t feel welcome in the hockey community. “Once we stop thinking about that, I think that’s when it gets dangerous,” he said.

The Wild’s Pride Night is scheduled for March 12.

‘On track’: Three percent of Americans have gotten the new Covid shot, but the CDC director remains confident

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The Biden administration’s campaign to convince Americans to get an annual Covid shot is off to a very slow start.

Even so, the nation’s top disease-fighting official says the U.S. remains “on track” to hit last year’s uptake levels, which crested at just 17 percent of the U.S. population.

So far, 12 million people, or about 3.6 percent of the population, have gotten the shot in the five weeks since it hit pharmacy shelves — though reporting lags mean it’s likely a bit higher, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Mandy Cohen said.

More people, by far — 128 million — have gotten their annual flu vaccine, Cohen said, attributing the difference to long-held routines.

Cohen is in the middle of a national tour promoting vaccination targeting elderly people at most risk from Covid, as well as underserved communities.

She’s also meeting with lawmakers on Capitol Hill, including House Republicans who have criticized the agency, as part of her efforts to rebuild trust in the CDC.

She spoke about her pitch in an interview with POLITICO on Tuesday.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity. 

The vaccine numbers seem really low — how do you explain them?

What I would say about that number is, just like the process, it’s different [now that insurers are paying for the vaccine rather than the federal government.]

We don’t have the same level of visibility. When you don’t purchase and distribute, you also aren’t getting the same real-time information about who’s vaccinated. The number is really just a number that our pharmacy partners share back with us voluntarily.

Is distribution a problem?

This is the first time the private sector is doing this work. I think they’ve learned some lessons about distribution and demand.

After the first couple of weeks, things have really resolved so there are plenty of appointments, plenty of supply.

Is 12 million what you were expecting at this point?

I think we’re on track. Would I love to see more? Of course, that’s my job as CDC director is to want more.

What’s the goal? 

Look, I want as many people vaccinated as possible. I certainly want to make sure that we’re getting to our over 65 population.

The uptake of last year’s booster was 17 percent. Are you on track to hit that number?

Towards that number. I’d like to see it higher. I think we all would, but I think that’s a fair benchmark.

How does that compare with the flu in terms of uptake?

The flu shots have been around for a lot longer and people have sort of worked it into their routine and so the flu shot uptake is higher than what we were seeing at least with the past Covid boosters.

The Covid shot is a new formulation, so we’ll see if that matters to folks. It’s paired at the same time with the flu shot, so we’ll see if that changes how people are thinking about it and the uptake.

I think it does take time to build these sorts of habits and that behavioral change.

Most people got the initial Covid shots. Why don’t most people want this one?

I think there’s a lot of folks that say ‘I got the original ones. Aren’t we done here?’ Or ‘I’ve had Covid, aren’t I protected?’

I’m trying to help them understand two important facts: One is that the virus has changed. And this updated vaccine is mapped to those changes in the virus. And then the other fact is we’re seeing in the data that your protection from either a previous vaccine or from having Covid before decreases over time.

People were told they were fully vaccinated with the initial shots. Was that a mistake?

You haven’t heard us use that term in a while. I find it confusing.

At the time, we used ‘fully vaccinated’ to help folks understand they needed to complete the primary series. I think that was right. But what does fully vaccinated mean for us right now? It’s getting this updated Covid vaccine.

What are you doing on tour and what are you hearing?

The visits have been to locations where we know that there are higher risk folks who need to get vaccinated. Yesterday I was out in the Philly area and I went to a nursing home. Obviously we want to get our older Americans vaccinated.

Last week I was in Miami and we went to a CVS ymas, which is a store focused on the Latino community, also another important group to make sure we’re getting vaccinated.

The reception has been very good.

We’re trying to get the word out and meet with the folks who are doing the hard work of vaccinating. We recognize their time and effort and that they have to keep at it.

In your meetings on the Hill, have you made any inroads with Republicans?

I think the first part of building trust is showing up and listening and so that’s what I’ve been doing.

Off-duty pilot told Horizon Air cockpit crew ‘I’m not okay,’ took psychedelic mushrooms before trying to shut off engines

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The harrowing encounter that nearly doomed a Horizon Air plane flying Sunday from Seattle to San Francisco began without warning when an off-duty Alaska Airlines pilot from Pleasant Hill riding in a cockpit jump seat blurted out to the flight captain and first officer: “I’m not okay,” according to a federal court affidavit.

Joseph David Emerson, 44, then reached up and pulled red handles that cut off fuel to the plane’s engines, intended as an emergency safety measure if they catch fire, the affidavit said. The pilot grabbed Emerson’s wrist and the men “wrestled” for about 30 seconds, then Emerson “quickly settled down,” it said. The pilot asked Emerson to leave the cockpit, and Emerson left on his own, it said.

The plane landed in Portland, where officers arrested Emerson, 44, on charges of attempted murder, reckless endangerment and endangering an aircraft, and he was expected to be arraigned in court Tuesday.

Federal authorities have since charged Emerson with interfering with a flight crew that carries a sentence of up to 20 years if he’s convicted. The affidavit by FBI Special Agent TaPara Simmons Jr. was filed in support of those charges, and said Emerson “became depressed” about six months ago, talked to police aboutusing psychedelic mushrooms and “said it was his first-time taking mushrooms.” It was not clear from the affidavit whether Emerson was under the influence of psychedelic mushrooms during the flight.

The cockpit incident, which the affidavit said lasted only a minute and a half, shocked friends and neighbors who knew Emerson as a safety-conscious pilot and a devoted family man.

“He’s everything you would want to have in a good neighbor,” said longtime neighbor Karen Yee. “Great guy. Great family.”

Added Adam Silverthorne, president of the NRI Flying Club in Concord, where Emerson was a member and served as a flying instructor about five years ago: “It came as a shock. I’ve known him to be an upstanding citizen in every way.”

No one answered the door at Emerson’s home Monday and family members didn’t respond to requests for comment. It was unclear if he has a lawyer.

Emerson was riding in an extra “jump seat” in the cockpit of Horizon Air flight 2059, an Embraer 175 that left Everett, Washington, at 5:23 p.m. Sunday, headed for San Francisco.

Alaska Airlines, which owns Horizon Air, said in a revised statement Monday evening that Emerson had joined Alaska Air Group as a Horizon first officer in August 2001. In June 2012, he left Horizon to join Virgin America as a pilot. Following Alaska’s acquisition of Virgin America in 2016, he became an Alaska Airlines first officer again and rose to captain in 2019.

“Throughout his career, Emerson completed his mandated FAA medical certifications in accordance with regulatory requirements, and at no point were his certifications denied, suspended or revoked,” Alaska Airlines said.

Ross “Rusty” Aimer, president of Aero Consulting Experts, said jump-seat accommodations are a professional courtesy extended to off-duty U.S. pilots so they can travel to and from where they live and the flights they are working. The flight’s pilot, or captain, must clear the off-duty pilot to join the flight, and to sit in the cockpit.

According to the FBI affidavit, the flight 2059 pilot said he’d never met Emerson but that “there was zero indication of anything wrong” before the flight, and that Emerson engaged both pilots in “casual conversation about types of aircraft” and the weather.

That changed about 39 minutes into the flight, when Emerson suddenly threw his headset across the cockpit and said “I’m not okay,” then grabbed both the red engine shutoff handles, the affidavit said. The pilots kept Emerson from pulling the handles all the way — had he done so, it would have turned “the aircraft into a gliderwithin seconds.”

The pilots alerted flight attendants that Emerson was “losing it,” and they saw him “peacefully walking” toward the rear of the plane, the affidavit said, saying he’d “just got kicked out of the flight deck” and that “you need to cuff me right now or it’s going to be bad.”

They escorted him to a flight attendant seat, secured the seat belt and put his hands in flex cuffs, the affidavit said. As the plane descended toward Portland, Emerson allegedly tried to grab an emergency exit handle, and told flight attendants that he “tried to kill everybody” and had “messed everything up.”

In a recorded statement to police after they had read him his rights, Emerson allegedly said he had not slept in 40 hours and was having a “nervous breakdown,” and was dehydrated and tired, the affidavit said.

“It seemed like the pilots weren’t paying attention to what was going on,” Emerson was quoted telling police in the affidavit. “They didn’t…it didn’t seem right . . . Yah…I pulled both emergency shut off handles because I thought I was dreaming and I just wanna wake up.”

Though he denied taking any medication, he said he “became depressed” six months ago and “talked aboutthe use of psychedelic mushrooms,” and he “said it was his first-time taking mushrooms.” It wasn’t clear from the affidavit if that meant he was under the influence of mushrooms during the flight.

The affidavit said that Emerson told Port of Portland police “I’m admitting to what I did, I’m not fighting any charges you want to bring against me, guys.”

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Authorities in Gardner locate murder suspect’s car in wooded area

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Investigators have located the vehicle belonging to the Gardner man accused of killing his wife in their home Sunday.

Police were looking for 33-year-old Aaron Pennington, who is wanted in connection with Sunday’s homicide of 30-year-old Breanne Pennington in Gardner. (Massachusetts State Police photo)

A bow hunter on Monday night located a white BMW abandoned in a wooded area at Camp Collier, a camp that according to the Boy Scouts Troop 54 website serves Boy Scouts expeditions. Worcester District Attorney Joseph Early Jr. confirmed the vehicle belonged to Aaron Pennington, 33, who is accused of killing his wife, Breanne Pennington, 30, in their Cherry Street home in Gardner Sunday.

“The vehicle was located by a hunter. So we’re asking anyone with trail cams, any hunters, any people with video cameras at their houses, please give it to the police,” Worcester District Attorney Joseph Early Jr. said in a press conference Tuesday afternoon. “It’s incredible how often that these tips help us solve crimes, find people. So we’re asking the public for all of their help right now.”

Gardner Police Chief Eric McAvene said at the same press conference that the areas authorities are most interested in seeing cam footage “in the old county area of Ashburnham, out to the Route 101 area.”

He said that anyone with footage or information to share should contact Gardner Police by calling 978-632-5600 or by contacting the Massachusetts State Police Detective Unit for Worcester County at 508-832-9124.

The Pennington children are in the custody of the Department of Child and Family Services, Early said.

Early said that authorities are working under the assumption that Aaron Pennington is armed and dangerous and that professionals are tracking him “with an abundance of caution” and urged that “no one in the public go out and try and look for this guy.”

This is a developing story.