News

Passengers at US airports will no longer have to remove their shoes to pass through security under a new policy unveiled Tuesday, 20 years after the requirement was introduced.
The rule, first established in 2001 by the then-outgoing Clinton administration, allows the federal agency to designate “inventoried roadless areas” within the National Forest System.
The Town Board approved a needed permit, but imposed limits on the restaurant's operating hours − restrictions the developer said may force the company to scrap the project.
Ayers has more than a million cubic yards of scrap tires but is only permitted to have 1,300 cubic yards. (Tim Kupsick, Star-Tribune) ...
Passengers at US airports will no longer have to remove their shoes to pass through security under a new policy unveiled Tuesday, 20 years after the requirement was introduced.