Robert Downey Jr. Is Helping To Restore Classic Cars With Electric Power

Kindred is a passion project bolstered by Robert Downey Jr. that seeks to reimagine classic cars in a new way.

Here's How Long A Tesla Cybertruck Battery Will Likely Last

The Tesla Cybertruck will have a resilient battery, but CEO Elon Musk wants to maintain affordability.

5 Instagram Settings You Might Want To Change

Though the app has many facets, Instagram’s settings can be personalized to a specific user’s needs.

Elon Musk Officially Owns Twitter Now. Here’s What Might Change.

Despite his best efforts to exit the deal, Musk now has to run the company.

Today's Wordle Answer #496 – October 28, 2022 Solution And Hints

Friday’s Wordle is appropriately spooky for the Halloween season, but if you’re having trouble finding today’s word, we can help with some hints.

8 Found Dead After Tulsa Suburb House Fire; Homicide Feared

Oklahoma police say they found eight people dead in a burning Tulsa-area house in what is being investigated as a homicide case.

Minnesota and DC sue Target-owned Shipt delivery service for worker misclassification

The Minnesota and District of Columbia attorneys general are suing Target-owned Shipt delivery service over worker misclassification, CBS News has reported. The lawsuits accuse the company of designating its “personal shoppers” (who pick and deliver grocery orders) as independent contractors to avoid paying benefits like state unemployment insurance and worker’s compensation. 

“Increasingly, we’re seeing companies abuse hard-working District residents by fraudulently calling them independent contractors and, as a result, denying them wages and benefits they are legally owed,” said DC AG Karl Racine in a statement.

Shipt said it disagrees with the allegation and that most of its workers prefer being able to set their own hours. “Shoppers with Shipt are independent contractors, and the flexibility that comes with being an independent contractor is the primary reason Shipt Shoppers choose to earn on our platform,” spokesperson Evangeline George told CBS News. Citing its own survey, it said that 80 percent of its workers named such flexibility as a key priority.

However, Minnesota attorney general Keith Ellison said the company controls “virtually every facet of a shopper’s work” despite claiming the workers are independent. “Unlike other employees, these workers have no clarity on how much they will be paid day to day, and they often don’t receive the minimum wage and overtime they’re entitled to,” he added. 

The suits seek to recover paid sick leave owed, unpaid wages, payments owed for unemployment insurance, penalties and more. Other delivery companies including DoorDash have faced similar actions, and Instacart recently agreed to pay $46.5 million in a settlement with the city of San Diego over misclassified workers. Earlier this year, Massachusetts sued Uber and Lyft for identifying drivers as contractors. 

‘Everything’s Mine,’ Trump Told Bob Woodward Of His Presidency

The legendary Watergate journalist has never heard a president talk about the office that way, Woodward said in an MSNBC interview.

UN warns there's currently 'no credible pathway' to keep temperature rise under 1.5C

The United Nations has issued another stark warning that, under current policies, the planet is falling far short of the Paris Agreement goal of keeping the rise in global temperatures below 1.5 degrees Celsius. That’s the threshold scientists say we have to remain under in order to mitigate extreme, life-threatening weather events, such as heatwaves, droughts and tropical storms. Under current policies, the UN suggests we’re nowhere close to meeting that climate change target and that there’s “no credible pathway to 1.5C in place.”

The UN laid out the dire state of affairs in a report it released just a week before the start of the COP27 climate conference in Egypt. It said that pledges made by national policy makers since COP26, which was held in Glasgow last year, “make a negligible difference to predicted 2030 emissions” and that progress over the last 12 months has been “highly inadequate.” In fact, the report suggests that current active policies will lead to a 2.8C rise in global temperatures by the end of the 21st century and that implementing pledges that have been made will only limit the rise to between 2.4C and 2.6C. Even that would require perfect implementation of plans, with wealthier countries helping poorer ones to enact them.

“In the best case scenario, full implementation of conditional NDCs [nationally determined contributions], plus additional net zero commitments, point to a 1.8C rise,” Inger Andersen, executive director of the United Nations Environment Programme, said. “However, this scenario is currently not credible.”

The 13th edition of the Emissions Gap Report argues that major societal and infrastructure changes are required. It lays out the necessary actions for sectors including electricity supply, industry, transport and buildings, along with the food and financial systems. The report notes that, in order to get on course to meet the 1.5C goal, we’d need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by a further 45 percent by 2030, compared with projections based on current policies. To limit the rise in temperatures to under 2C, an extra 30 percent reduction in emissions is required.

“Is it a tall order to transform our systems in just eight years? Yes. Can we reduce greenhouse gas emissions by so much in that timeframe? Perhaps not. But we must try,” Andersen wrote. “Every fraction of a degree matters: to vulnerable communities, to species and ecosystems, and to every one of us.”

Police Arrest Man Over Burglary Of Arizona Gov. Nominee Katie Hobbs’ Office

The man had items missing from Hobbs’ office with him when he was arrested for the unrelated burglary, police said.