UPDATE: No injuries reported in 8-vehicle wreck on Interstate 24, traffic backed up through Clarksville


Update, 5 p.m.: Traffic is now backed up past Exit 4.

The Clarksville Police Department is assisting the Tennessee Highway patrol with the crash, and there are no injuries reported at this time, according to a news release from CPD spokesperson Scott Beaubien.

Previously:

CLARKSVILLE, TN (CLARKSVILLE NOW) – An eight-vehicle wreck has blocked traffic on Interstate 24.

At about 4:21 p.m., four vehicles crashed in the eastbound lanes just past Exit 8. Not long after, another four vehicles crashed.

At 4:45 p.m., traffic was backed up past Exit 8 to Exit 4.

This article will be updated.



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Cambridge Police Investigating Reported Sexual Assault in Porter Square Area


Cambridge Police detectives are investigating a report that a 47-year-old Somerville woman was physically and sexually assaulted near the Porter Exchange Shopping Center at 1815 Massachusetts Avenue on Wednesday morning around 8:40 a.m. The survivor reported she was walking down Roseland Street towards Massachusetts Avenue when she felt someone quickly approach her. After attempting to step out of the way, the suspect reportedly reached up her skirt and aggressively felt her buttocks. When she turned around to confront the suspect, he ran away.  Unfortunately, the survivor was not able to obtain a description for the suspect.

The Cambridge Police are actively investigating this incident and seeking to locate any potential evidence associated with this report. If any residents, businesses or people who travel or visit the area have any video or information, particularly around 8:40 a.m. on Wednesday, please call 617-349-3300. Those who wish to provide information anonymously may dial the Cambridge Police Anonymous Crime Tip Hotline at 617-349-3359 and leave a message. Anonymous tips may also be sent via the Cambridge Police MyPD mobile app or via text message to 847411. Begin your text with TIP650 and then type your message. To send tips via email, visit http://www.cambridgepolice.org/Tips. In the meantime, Cambridge Police will continue to provide enhanced attention to the area.



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Minor injuries reported after big rig overturns on I-285 in Fulton – The Atlanta Journal Constitution



Minor injuries reported after big rig overturns on I-285 in Fulton   The Atlanta Journal Constitution



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Taiwan-Palau travel bubble bursts, 189 COVID cases reported | Taiwan News


TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — The travel bubble between Taiwan and Palau is in jeopardy as the diplomatic ally’s COVID case count has risen to 189.


On Wednesday evening (Jan. 19), Palau’s Ministry of Health and Human Services announced 22 new COVID cases. The country had already reported 161 active cases related to travel, nine active cases in the local community, 19 who have recovered, and 603 undergoing quarantine.


Palau’s Island Times on Tuesday (Jan. 18) reported that the country is suffering a COVID outbreak after nearly two years of having zero cases. Given the “characteristics and the speed of the spread,” the newspaper cited local physicians as saying that the culprit behind the surge is likely the Omicron variant.


Hospital isolation wards have reportedly “filled up” and people who test positive now are being told to quarantine at home. In an attempt to control the outbreak, all schools have suspended classes.


Taiwan and Palau are operating a travel bubble in which arrivals from Taiwan do not need to quarantine and only need to undergo self-health monitoring. Likewise, when they return from Palau do not need to undergo quarantine and can instead observe five days of enhanced self-health monitoring followed by nine days of general self-health monitoring.


In response to the spike in cases in Palau, Central Epidemic Command Center (CECC) Spokesman Chuang Jen-hsiang (莊人祥) said that a video conference will be held with Palau’s health ministry soon to better understand the local outbreak and re-evaluate whether it is necessary to adjust quarantine measures related to the “five plus nine” Palau travel bubble.


The next Taiwanese tour group is scheduled to fly to Palau on Jan. 26, and given the rapid rise in cases, the trip appears to be in jeopardy or could be subject to restrictions.




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Cruises reported over 1,350 covid cases since sailing resumed, CDC says


The document provides several examples, mostly involving breakthrough cases, including one in which a symptomatic passenger who tested positive on a ship in late July was linked to 20 more confirmed cases over two sailings. In that case, 18 service workers and two passengers were infected. One ship reported 58 positive cases between July 24 and Aug. 28, and another reported 105 confirmed cases on four back-to-back trips between Aug. 19 and Sept. 7. One reported 112 cases on four voyages between Aug. 21 and Sept. 7.



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State Patrol: More than 120 crashes reported as storm system moves through the state


According to Sgt. Jesse Grabow, troopers responded to a total of 121 crashes during that timeframe, and there were another 49 reports of vehicles going off the road, spin-outs and jackknifed semis. Sgt. Grabow adds out of the crashes, one was fatal, and 27 involved injuries. 

In the west-central and northwest region, the agency said there were five crashes between 10 p.m. and 10 a.m. Thursday.  No one was reported injured in those crashes. There were also 23 vehicles that needed to be helped by troopers or a towing agency in the region.

Authorities say there were 12 crashes in the St. Cloud region from 10 p.m. Wednesday to 10 a.m. Thursday, as well as 10 vehicles that went off the road and required assistance. 

In addition, a semi hauling turkeys tipped over while stopped due to high wind speeds on Highway 12 in Kandiyohi County. Wind speeds of nearly 80 mph were reported in Redwood Falls, according to the National Weather Service. 

The Minnesota Department of Transportation issued a no-travel advisory in a dozen counties—including Kandiyohi—on Wednesday. That advisory was lifted early Thursday morning. 





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Reported Covid-19 cases likely just the tip of the iceberg, experts say


There are fears mystery Covid cases in Auckland and the Waikato could be the tip of an iceberg of undetected transmission.

The government is set to announce its decision about Auckland’s alert levels today, but it is highly unlikely there will be any change after 50 cases over the weekend, two in Waikato.

Many of last week’s cases were found by Janet Masoe-Hundal and her testing team from Pacific health provider The Fono who had spent the weekend door knocking and testing families in transitional housing.

She was not expecting any alert level change, saying they were still discovering too many cases – and in different parts of Auckland.

“Some of these cases are … mystery cases and can’t be linked to any of the clusters so that’s the scary part of the work that we do,” she said.

Te Rōpū Whakakaupapa Urutā, the National Māori Pandemic Group, was also worried about secretly circulating virus, both in and out of Auckland.

Co-leader Sue Crengle said Covid could stay hidden longer in the relatively young group in this outbreak.

“We remain concerned that there is more going on than simply a long and difficult tail and so we are quite concerned about that – whether there is more circulating Covid in the community,” she said.

In the past three weeks there had frequently been cases turning up randomly – at hospitals, in police cells, the surveillance testing of a truck driver who had driven to Palmerston North, and the latest Waikato cases.

Last night, the Ministry of Health announced a parent of a newborn in intensive care at Auckland Hospital was found to have the virus through surveillance testing.

Epidemiologist Michael Baker said the cases suggested a “iceberg phenomenon”.

“Where you’re just seeing the top of a whole lot of cases … the tip of the iceberg of cases occurring in the community,” he said.

That was more of a problem now Auckland was at level 3 with so many more people working, or moving around – and a worry for the rest of the country with travel across the boundary.

It meant the city should stay at level 3 for at least two more weeks, to try to get vaccination coverage up, he said.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern had wanted 90 percent of eligible Aucklanders to have had their first vaccination by today.

That was now at 84 percent, meaning 87,000 more needed a jab to reach the target.

Improving vaccination was one focus for Baker and Crengle and a team of leading public health experts who yesterday called for urgent changes to the government’s plan for fighting Covid.

In a University of Otago academic blog, they call for a number of measures including faster and more extensive testing, a moratorium on drug prosecutions and a longer and stronger border around Auckland.

They wanted more mandatory vaccinations, including for people to be allowed into bars, cafes and shows.

Baker said people who went to indoor venues to have fun – laughing, talking, singing and socialising – would want to know the other people there were vaccinated.

“Because if you do those activities indoors and you’re not vaccinated you can fill a whole room with an aerosol containing the Covid-19 virus,” he said.

The group also wanted more control put into the hands of health providers from Māori and Pacific communities because they were most affected by this outbreak.

The Fono’s Janet Masoe-Hundal said people she was testing had often had 10 phone calls from the Ministry of Health or their district health board all asking the same questions by the time she turned up. They were understandably frustrated.

“I would love to just communicate with our families directly and be the one point of contact for them. We understand what they’re going through and we have the cultural competency to work with our families,” she said.



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Covid-19: Reported Delta cases likely the tip of the iceberg, experts say


There are fears mystery Covid cases in Auckland and the Waikato could be the tip of an iceberg of undetected transmission.

The government is set to announce its decision about Auckland’s alert levels on Monday, but it is highly unlikely there will be any change after 50 cases over the weekend, two in Waikato.

Many of last week’s cases were found by Janet Masoe-Hundal and her testing team from Pacific health provider The Fono, who had spent the weekend door knocking and testing families in transitional housing.

She was not expecting any alert level change on Monday, saying they were still discovering too many cases – and in different parts of Auckland.

Cabinet is due to meet on Monday to review Auckland's Covid-19 alert level settings (file photo).

Ricky Wilson/Stuff

Cabinet is due to meet on Monday to review Auckland’s Covid-19 alert level settings (file photo).

READ MORE:
* Waikato should join Auckland in level 4, says Māori health expert group
* Covid-19 live: Update on cases, locations of interest and alert levels for Monday
* Covid-19: Vaccination drive needs less science and more carrots and sticks

“Some of these cases are … mystery cases and can’t be linked to any of the clusters so that’s the scary part of the work that we do,” she said.

Te Rōpū Whakakaupapa Urutā, the National Māori Pandemic Group, was also worried about secretly circulating virus, both in and out of Auckland.

Co-leader Sue Crengle said Covid-19 could stay hidden longer in the relatively young group in this outbreak.

“We remain concerned that there is more going on than simply a long and difficult tail and so we are quite concerned about that – whether there is more circulating Covid in the community,” she said.

The new Waikato boundary went into effect on Monday as the discovery of two cases.

Unite Against COvid-19

The new Waikato boundary went into effect on Monday as the discovery of two cases.

In the past three weeks there had frequently been cases turning up randomly – at hospitals, in police cells, the surveillance testing of a truck driver who had driven to Palmerston North, and the latest Waikato cases.

On Sunday night, the Ministry of Health announced a parent of a newborn in intensive care at Auckland Hospital was found to have the virus through surveillance testing.

Epidemiologist Michael Baker said the cases suggested a “iceberg phenomenon”.

“Where you’re just seeing the top of a whole lot of cases … the tip of the iceberg of cases occurring in the community,” he said.

That was more of a problem now Auckland was at level 3 with so many more people working, or moving around – and a worry for the rest of the country with travel across the boundary.

It meant the city should stay at level 3 for at least two more weeks, to try to get vaccination coverage up, he said.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern had wanted 90 per cent of eligible Aucklanders to have had their first vaccination by Monday.

That was now at 84 per cent, meaning 87,000 more needed a jab to reach the target.

Improving vaccination was one focus for Baker and Crengle and a team of leading public health experts who on Sunday called for urgent changes to the government’s plan for fighting Covid-19.

In a University of Otago academic blog, they call for a number of measures including faster and more extensive testing, a moratorium on drug prosecutions and a longer and stronger border around Auckland.

Epidemiologist Michael Baker says we may be looking at the tip of an iceberg of cases.

ROSA WOODS/Stuff

Epidemiologist Michael Baker says we may be looking at the tip of an iceberg of cases.

They wanted more mandatory vaccinations, including for people to be allowed into bars, cafes and shows.

Baker said people who went to indoor venues to have fun – laughing, talking, singing and socialising – would want to know the other people there were vaccinated.

“Because if you do those activities indoors and you’re not vaccinated you can fill a whole room with an aerosol containing the Covid-19 virus,” he said.

The group also wanted more control put into the hands of health providers from Māori and Pacific communities because they were most affected by this outbreak.

The Fono’s Janet Masoe-Hundal said people she was testing had often had 10 phone calls from the Ministry of Health or their district health board all asking the same questions by the time she turned up. They were understandably frustrated.

“I would love to just communicate with our families directly and be the one point of contact for them. We understand what they’re going through and we have the cultural competency to work with our families,” she said.



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Reported Covid-19 cases likely just the tip of the iceberg, experts say


There are fears mystery Covid cases in Auckland and the Waikato could be the tip of an iceberg of undetected transmission.

The Fono mobile testing team lead Janet Masoe, with team members.

Many of last week’s cases were found by Janet Masoe-Hundal and her testing team from Pacific health provider The Fono.
Photo: Supplied

The government is set to announce its decision about Auckland’s alert levels today, but it is highly unlikely there will be any change after 50 cases over the weekend, two in Waikato.

Many of last week’s cases were found by Janet Masoe-Hundal and her testing team from Pacific health provider The Fono who had spent the weekend door knocking and testing families in transitional housing.

She was not expecting any alert level change, saying they were still discovering too many cases – and in different parts of Auckland.

“Some of these cases are … mystery cases and can’t be linked to any of the clusters so that’s the scary part of the work that we do,” she said.

Te Rōpū Whakakaupapa Urutā, the National Māori Pandemic Group, was also worried about secretly circulating virus, both in and out of Auckland.

Co-leader Sue Crengle said Covid could stay hidden longer in the relatively young group in this outbreak.

“We remain concerned that there is more going on than simply a long and difficult tail and so we are quite concerned about that – whether there is more circulating Covid in the community,” she said.

In the past three weeks there had frequently been cases turning up randomly – at hospitals, in police cells, the surveillance testing of a truck driver who had driven to Palmerston North, and the latest Waikato cases.

Last night, the Ministry of Health announced a parent of a newborn in intensive care at Auckland Hospital was found to have the virus through surveillance testing.

Professor Michael Baker.

Epidemiologist Michael Baker
Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Epidemiologist Michael Baker said the cases suggested a “iceberg phenomenon”.

“Where you’re just seeing the top of a whole lot of cases … the tip of the iceberg of cases occurring in the community,” he said.

That was more of a problem now Auckland was at level 3 with so many more people working, or moving around – and a worry for the rest of the country with travel across the boundary.

It meant the city should stay at level 3 for at least two more weeks, to try to get vaccination coverage up, he said.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern had wanted 90 percent of eligible Aucklanders to have had their first vaccination by today.

That was now at 84 percent, meaning 87,000 more needed a jab to reach the target.

Improving vaccination was one focus for Baker and Crengle and a team of leading public health experts who yesterday called for urgent changes to the government’s plan for fighting Covid.

In a University of Otago academic blog, they call for a number of measures including faster and more extensive testing, a moratorium on drug prosecutions and a longer and stronger border around Auckland.

They wanted more mandatory vaccinations, including for people to be allowed into bars, cafes and shows.

Baker said people who went to indoor venues to have fun – laughing, talking, singing and socialising – would want to know the other people there were vaccinated.

“Because if you do those activities indoors and you’re not vaccinated you can fill a whole room with an aerosol containing the Covid-19 virus,” he said.

The group also wanted more control put into the hands of health providers from Māori and Pacific communities because they were most affected by this outbreak.

The Fono’s Janet Masoe-Hundal said people she was testing had often had 10 phone calls from the Ministry of Health or their district health board all asking the same questions by the time she turned up. They were understandably frustrated.

“I would love to just communicate with our families directly and be the one point of contact for them. We understand what they’re going through and we have the cultural competency to work with our families,” she said.

Te Rōpū Whakakaupapa Urutā is calling for increased routine screening, mandatory vaccination for more groups of workers including healthcare and aged-care staff, an upgraded alert level system, strengthened regional boundaries and more help for marginalised communities.



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