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The Brief

The most important stories for you to know today
  • Providers face a housing nightmare
    A blue table has colorful letter magnets and additional children's toys are on a carpeted floor.
    In-home child care providers face a host of hurdles when it comes to housing, from resistance from landlords and homeowners associations to onerous licensing requirements and regulations.

    Topline:

    In-home child care providers face a host of hurdles when it comes to housing, from rising housing costs to resistance from landlords and homeowners associations to onerous licensing requirements and regulations.

    Why it matters: These barriers are forcing would-be or once-were caregivers out of the sector, which serves millions of children across the country. This is leaving a workforce that is overwhelmingly made up of women and is disproportionately people of color without livelihoods and reducing the already-scarce child care supply in the process.

    The numbers: Between 2005 and 2017, nearly half of all licensed home-based programs closed. By 2019, the number of licensed programs had further declined, with only about 91,000 remaining open across the United States, according to the National Survey of Early Care and Education.

    Location matters: The space itself matters a great deal in this equation, home-based providers say. A provider and their property is all a family sees when making a decision about where, and with whom, their child will spend the bulk of their time.

    Last fall, Gisela Sance’s landlord approached her family about raising the rent.

    This article was co-published by The 19th with EdSurge, a nonprofit newsroom that covers the future of learning through original journalism and research.

    He wanted $2,000 a month, an astonishing hike over the $1,300 she and her husband were paying for the house they lived in with their young son. The decision to leave was painful but not hard: There was no way they could afford a 50% increase in their rent.

    It was happening all around her — in Austin, Texas, where she lives, and elsewhere. But that knowledge provided little comfort when, in November, Sance found herself boxing up her family’s belongings.

    “This move was an emergency,” she shares through a Spanish interpreter.

    The new place they found was smaller, farther away from their community, and in Sance’s assessment, less safe — she has installed a security camera. When her family moved in, they found mold, cockroaches and a general state of disrepair. And at $1,650 a month, it was quite a bit more than they’d been paying at the last place but still the best rate they could find.

    “I had to take it,” Sance explains. “I’m thankful that right now I am stable, but I do want to move [again].”

    For any family, in any place, this situation would be disruptive. But for home-based child care providers like Sance, whose house doubles as an early care and education program by day, the situation is compounded.

    During the move last fall, Sance lost all but one of the four children for whom she’d been providing care. At her last place, the families were practically neighbors, walking to her home each day to drop off their kids. Most were not in a position to follow her; only one had a car.

    For home-based child care providers, the living situation is inseparable from the work, and when one suffers, the other does too. That tricky dynamic, while not new, has gotten more tenuous in recent years — particularly since the pandemic, with home prices skyrocketing, interest rates increasing and rental home prices inflating.

    One quarter of child care providers surveyed between March 2021 and December 2022 reported difficulty affording housing expenses, regardless of whether they rent or own, according to RAPID, a project based out of Stanford University that gathers information about young children and their caregivers. Those rates were higher among Latino (36%) and Black (35%) providers, almost all of whom are women. Eviction and foreclosure are common concerns, too: 42% of providers worry about not being able to make their rent or mortgage payments.

    It’s not just the cost of renting and buying homes that creates challenges either. In-home child care providers face a host of hurdles when it comes to housing, from resistance from landlords and homeowners associations (HOAs) to onerous licensing requirements and regulations.

    Together, those barriers are forcing would-be or once-were caregivers out of the sector, which serves millions of children across the country. This is leaving a workforce that is overwhelmingly made up of women and is disproportionately people of color without livelihoods and reducing the already-scarce child care supply in the process.

    Data collected over the past two decades by the Administration for Children and Families, a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, reveals the extent of the loss. Between 2005 and 2017, nearly half of all licensed home-based programs closed. By 2019, the number of licensed programs had further declined, with only about 91,000 remaining open across the United States, according to the National Survey of Early Care and Education.

    While growth in center-based care capacity made up for those losses, it doesn’t help the millions of families who prefer a home-based setting. Some are attracted to the small-group aspect of it, the intimacy. Others choose it because it ties their child to a shared background or culture — perhaps a caregiver speaks the same language that the child’s family speaks at home or immigrated from the same country.

    Home-based providers often describe their programs as feeling more like a second family than an institution, where providers go beyond the scope of the job description to attend birthday parties and sporting events or stay in touch with a family well after the youngest child starts school. There is trust and familiarity.

    To get to that point, though, providers must be able to recruit willing families. The space itself matters a great deal in this equation, they say. A provider and their property is all a family sees when making a decision about where, and with whom, their child will spend the bulk of their time.

    “Trying to find a property is like [looking for] a needle in a haystack,” explains Myra Saboor, a home-based provider in Atlanta, “because you’re trying to make sure you have adequate accommodation for your families — the kitchen, yard space, bathrooms, parking spaces, overall neighborhood. That’s what you’re marketing.”

    The Landlord Dilemma

    Ja’Neka Lewis, a home-based child care provider in Henderson, Nevada, has been looking for a place since March, when the lease on her apartment ended.

    She opted not to renew, wanting something bigger and more conducive to providing home-based child care. She was looking for a house with a backyard and enough common space that her own family could have an area separate from where the children learn and play.

    Lewis had no idea what she was in for, or how many times she’d be rebuffed. All she needs is one property owner to say yes to her. But no one will.

    “It’s been hard having owners agree to it, see the benefit of it and not see it as a liability,” Lewis says. “You’re selling your business to them in a way.”

    While she tours properties and makes her case to homeowners, Lewis and her partner and child have been staying in a friend’s house. It’s not ideal, she concedes. Without a place of her own, she has lost the business of two of the three children in her care. (She cares for the third part-time in the child’s home now.) She’s been making up the lost income with babysitting shifts and money she’d saved up to start her own center-based program some day.

    Pushback from landlords and homeowners associations are common challenges for home-based providers, says Natalie Renew, executive director of Home Grown, a national organization working to improve the quality of and access to home-based child care.

    Landlords cite the additional wear and tear on their home that a group of young children would cause. They worry about lawsuits and liabilities if something were to go sideways. Homeowners associations add to the chorus — regardless of whether the provider owns the home or a landlord needs HOA approval — with concerns about disruptive noise in the neighborhood, increased traffic and limited parking spaces.

    Renew and others interviewed for this story note that these concerns are largely unfounded and steeped in misconceptions about home-based child care.

    For one, licensed child care providers are required to have liability insurance, Renew says, and because the state is going into their homes for regular and sometimes spontaneous inspections, providers keep their properties in tip-top condition.

    Mia Pritts, vice president of strategic partnerships at Wonderschool, a child care marketplacenotes that objections on the grounds of noise or traffic come from “a lack of understanding about what a child care program in your community is. The opposition is misplaced.”

    Landlords and members of HOAs have this image, Pritts says, of a 60-child operation with cars clogging up residential streets. But that’s not it at all. The average program serves only a handful of children, and the vast majority of sounds any neighbor would hear from that group, if they heard anything at all, would be “joyful noise … from a handful of children playing outside in the day,” Pritts says.

    Many landlords and HOAs, Renew says, need to reframe what it would mean to have a child care program in their homes and communities. Especially in places where, on the very same block that a program could operate, families are searching desperately for a place to send their own children.

    “If you bring your landlords and HOAs to the table and say to them, ‘How awesome would it be for us to put residents in your home, in your neighborhoods, that are going to fully occupy the facility at all times, have a promissory note from the state for payment, have been background checked within an inch of their lives, are insured top to bottom, and will be pillars of the community?’” Renew says. “Landlords should be saying, ‘Sign me up.’”

    Hefty Price Tags, Low Wages

    For many in-home caregivers, homeownership can feel like a pipe dream.

    According to data collected from RAPID between July and December 2022, 83% of providers who rent their homes said they wanted to become homeowners. The biggest barriers, they said, were an inability to afford a down payment (66%) and a lack of affordable housing options (58%), followed by debt, low credit scores, inability to secure a loan and job insecurity.

    These barriers all share a single explanation: Many home-based child care providers — like their counterparts in other child care settings — don’t earn a living wage.

    Child care workers nationally earned a median annual wage of $24,230 in 2019, according to the most recent Early Childhood Workforce Index, published by the Center for the Study of Child Care Employment. Data from the same year, collected in the National Survey of Early Care and Educationshows that home-based providers were living in households with annual incomes between $39,000 and $65,000, on average.

    Things have only worsened in the past three years. Thousands of home-based providers permanently closed their programs during the pandemic, unable to keep up with rising costs and shoulder periods of missed payments when children weren’t showing up. Many lack retirement savings or even emergency funds, nevermind the tens of thousands of dollars often needed for a down payment or the sound credit history for a mortgage loan.

    Housing prices have soared since the pandemic began, with the national median sales price of houses in the United States growing by about 33% since early 2020. With interest rates up too, the market has more or less elbowed out providers who might’ve viewed the path toward homeownership as feasible.

    As home prices have risen, so too have rental costs, adding to the obstacles in-home providers face. Landlords can list their houses for sale on a whim, forcing out their renters on short notice. In most states, child care providers have no recourse in those cases. They must find a new home and rebuild their program.

    And unlike being a homeowner, renters can experience unpredictable and extreme changes to their monthly payments, like what happened to Sance, the Austin provider who had to move last fall. The median rent nationwide increased by nearly 18% in 2021 alone.

    Sance’s situation further illustrates why renters might struggle to run child care businesses from their homes. She is now living in a two-bedroom house. She and her husband share their bedroom with their son, who is 6, so they can use the second bedroom and living room for her early childhood program. It’s too small to comfortably accommodate both her family and her program, but she’s been priced out of larger rentals.

    Saboor, the provider in Atlanta, recently experienced a 30% rent increase on her home — a cost she’s only been able to incur, she says, because of American Rescue Plan funds that will eventually expire.

    “We’re hearing from providers who rent of rent escalations that are through the roof,” Renew says.

    Labyrinthine Rules and Regulation

    Home-based child care is a business — more so, in many cases, than providers give themselves credit for. But because it deals with the care and safety of young children, it doesn’t get the same regulatory treatment as someone running, say, an Etsy shop out of their home.

    “No one thinks children should be in unsafe environments,” Pritts explains. “Health and safety regulations are really important.”

    Yet some of the measures in place to ensure the health, safety and well-being of children are doing more harm than good, according to numerous people interviewed for this story.

    Examples of well-intentioned but burdensome requirements and regulations abound. Renew ticked off a few she’s heard: hard-wired sprinkler systems, three-section sinks, numerous basement exit points. Some of these requirements are quite costly, Renew notes, but add no fair market value to providers’ homes and may actually reduce it over time.

    During a focus group-style conversation facilitated by Home Grown in January, Stacey Carpenter, a home-based provider in Weld County, Colorado, shared some of the challenges she’s faced over nearly two decades working in the field.

    “Zoning has been an issue for us here, building codes, fire sprinklers — things that we can’t afford,” Carpenter said. “To retrofit this house for fire sprinklers? It would put me out of business. I don’t make enough money to do that here.”

    For years, Carpenter operated her program below its care capacity due to zoning requirements that she couldn’t afford to address. She was licensed to serve nine children but only cared for six, meaning Carpenter missed out on additional income that she estimates cost her roughly $100,000 over a decade. In 2021, Carpenter began operating at full capacity after Colorado passed a law requiring that home-based child care programs be classified as residences for purposes of licensing and local regulations — the state’s effort to mitigate some of the barriers to entering and remaining in the field.

    Saboor, in Atlanta, started her home-based program in 2008. At the time, she recalls, she successfully procured a state license to run the program but wasn’t aware that she also had to get a business license from the city. Saboor was slapped with a fine. Then she had to pay out-of-pocket for a building inspector who, among other additions, instructed her to buy and hang an “exit” sign over her back door. At the time, Saboor was caring only for infants. During her business hours, the only person present who could even read the newly installed exit sign was her.

    Part of the challenge is navigating the inconsistencies at different levels. The state might have one set of criteria, while the city and county might have other, additional requirements. In effect, this amounts to a daunting sequence of hoops that providers are unable or unwilling to jump through.

    In Nevada, a state requirement regarding outdoor play space has been interpreted to mean that only single family homes are eligible for licensed child care — not apartments or condos, and in many cases not townhomes or duplexes either. This requirement, no doubt intended to create better learning environments for children, has hampered countless caregivers from getting licensed and other individuals from pursuing a career as a child care provider at all.

    These labyrinthine local and state regulations are only adding to the litany of challenges that stand in the way of home-based providers finding safe, stable housing for themselves and the children in their care. And the irony of it is that, in an attempt to make home-based child care safer and better for kids, all of the rules and requirements have only made home-based learning environments look and feel more like centers, when that may be a setting that parents and families had explored and ruled out.

    Many in the field, including Renew and Pritts, talk about homeownership as a primary wealth-building tool in the United States and the surest path to stability for those who make up the early care and education workforce. Yet for many current or aspiring providers, the concept of buying and owning a home on paltry wages is so far-fetched as to be absurd.

    The current processes in the early care and education system, Renew says, “are building on existing inequities in our society.” She mentions the racial wealth gap, gender-based bias and discrimination, and the inaccessibility of homeownership to immigrants and people from low-income backgrounds with bad credit.

    The takeaway of all this, Renew says? “You’re discouraged from pursuing home-based child care.”

    She adds: “We’re really worried about what we’re seeing.”

  • New CA bill would clamp down on collaboration
    A man in a light T-shirt and jeans is handcuffed in a parking lot while surrounded by a group of agents.
    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents transfer an immigrant after an early morning raid in Duarte.

    Topline:

    Following reports of local police assisting federal immigration agents with raids and detentions of citizen observers across Southern California, state lawmakers have introduced a bill seeking to outlaw such collaboration.

    The details: State Sen. Sasha Renée Pérez (D-Pasadena) announced Monday that she has introduced SB 1105, dubbed the Protect California Rights Act. The bill would ban local law enforcement from helping federal agents with operations based on racial profiling, efforts to stop First Amendment speech or actions involving unauthorized military weapons.

    Why proponents say it’s needed: At a news conference, Pérez said: “Californians deserve to feel safe. They deserve to trust that the officers sworn to protect them will not be used to intimidate them. And they deserve a state government that stands firmly on the side of civil rights and constitutional protections.”

    How enforcement would work: The bill is co-sponsored by ACLU California Action. Executive Director David Trujillo said if the bill passes, Californians who’ve been subject to illegal activity by local law enforcement could take their case to court. “The courts will be able to then step in and order local law enforcement to comply with our laws here in California,” Trujillo said.

    Community voices: The news conference featured speakers who have been detained by local police in incidents related to federal immigration actions. Jose Madera, director of the Pasadena Community Job Center, said he was arrested last month by Pasadena police while tracking the movements of an alleged ICE agent. “The perception of the community,” Madera said, “is that local police were protecting ICE agents and not protecting us, the residents, legal observers.”

    White House position: The Trump Administration and top officials at the Department of Homeland Security have consistently pushed back on efforts to curtail their aggressive enforcement of immigration policies. White House border czar Tom Homan on Sunday, for example, rejected Democrats calls for ICE officers to stop wearing masks, saying that while he didn't "like the masks either" officers said they were needed to protect from doxxing.

  • Prolific, pioneering filmmaker was 96

    Topline:

    Filmmaker Frederick Wiseman has died. The celebrated documentarian started making documentaries that captured the weirdness and wonder of everyday life in the mid 1960s and did not stop until 2023.

    About his career: The prolific, pioneering filmmaker made dozens of documentaries and chronicled the inner workings of institutions. His 1967 film, Titicut Follies, revealed appalling conditions at a prison facility.

    Filmmaker Frederick Wiseman has died. The celebrated documentarian started making documentaries that captured the weirdness and wonder of everyday life in the mid 1960s and did not stop until 2023.

    Wiseman died Monday. His family issued a joint statement with Zipporah Films. He was 96.

    Making movies was always an adventure, Wiseman said in 2016, during a speech at the Academy Awards when he won an honorary Oscar.

    "I usually know nothing about the subject before I start," he said at the black-tie ceremony. "And I know there are those that feel I know nothing about it when it's finished!"

    Wiseman was extremely prolific. He made roughly 50 documentaries, many of which chronicled the inner workings of institutions as diverse as the Idaho state legislature (State Legislature, 2007), the New York Public Library (Ex Libris, 2017), and a high school in Philadelphia (High School, 1968).

    "I wish I could be more like him," said Oscar-winning documentarian Errol Morris in an interview with NPR about Wiseman before the elder filmmaker died.

    Morris said Wiseman's super-charged yet subtle way of interpreting everyday life had more in common with the Theater of the Absurd than documentary filmmaking. (Indeed, Wiseman also had a career as a theater director in the U.S. and Europe, helming plays by the likes of Samuel Beckett and Luigi Pirandello.)

    "He has a way of finding in reality some of the most surreal, absurd moments that I've ever seen anywhere," Morris said.

    By way of example, Morris points to a scene in Wiseman's 1993 documentary Zoo, in which an all-women surgical team at Miami zoo castrates a wolf.

    "And it seems like the entire scene is populated by women except for the janitor standing by the exit door, looking nervously on with his hands folded over his crotch," Morris said. "To me, this is really almost as good as it gets."

    Morris added Wiseman was a mentor to him and a close friend. After Morris lost both his father and brother to heart disease, and was worried about his own fate, the filmmaker said Wiseman organized medical help for him. "I can even credit Fred with saving my life," Morris said.

    Frederick Wiseman was born in Boston in 1930. After serving in the U.S. Army during the Korean War and living in Paris during the 1950s, he taught law at Boston University.

    An older white man holds an award.
    Frederick Wiseman poses with his Golden Lion Lifetime Achievement Award at the Venice Film Festival in August 2014.
    (
    Pascal Le Segretain
    /
    Getty Images
    )

    It was taking his students on field trips to Bridgewater State Hospital, a Massachusetts prison facility for the criminally insane, that compelled the then law professor to direct his first, and most famous, film. Made in 1967, Titicut Follies gets its title from a stage show put on by the inmates at the institution.

    After its seemingly benign opening, the movie captures the appalling conditions under which the inmates are kept, with unblinking scenes of bullying, force feeding, strip searches and squalor.

    Titicut Follies was so shocking, the state of Massachusetts managed to get it banned from public screenings for more than two decades.

    "In order for anyone to see that film, for years you had to sign a declaration saying that you were a professional in one of the following fields, like criminology, law or film studies," said film scholar Barry Keith Grant, author of Voyages of Discovery: The Cinema of Frederick Wiseman.

    Still, Grant said the movie sealed Wiseman's future.

    "It gave him a lot of notoriety and it helped establish his career," Grant said.

    Over the years, Wiseman became known for his meticulous, hands-on process. He directed, produced and edited his movies. In a 2014 interview with NPR, the filmmaker described making National Gallery, his documentary about the famed London art museum.

    "I was there for three months, every day for twelve weeks, probably twelve, fourteen hours a day," Wiseman said of the shoot, adding he amassed 170 hours of footage. "So the ratio between film shot and film used is about 60 to one."

    Wiseman's films were also known for their prodigious length, running for as long as six hours. "I don't tailor the length to meet any commercial needs," Wiseman said. "I assume if people are interested, they'll watch it, whether it's 75 minutes or three hours."
    Copyright 2026 NPR

  • Concern is high for areas hit hard by recent fires
    An outline of California has intense cloud cover in an aerial shot.
    Conditions in Southern California Monday, Feb. 15, as heavy storms hit the state.

    Topline:

    A series of severe weather advisories ranging from extreme marine conditions to severe thunderstorms and the possibility of hail and weather spouts have peppered Southern California on Monday.

    Where things stand: The wet start to the week is expected to continue, with concerns high about possible mudslides and debris flows in areas hard hit by recent fires.

    Keep reading... for details on current conditions and the forecast.

    This story will be updated. Check back for details.

    A series of severe weather advisories — ranging from extreme marine conditions to severe thunderstorms and the possibility of hail and water spouts — have peppered Southern California on Monday. The wet start to the week is expected to continue, with concerns about possible mudslides and debris flows in areas hard hit by recent fires.

    L.A. Mayor Karen Bass issued an evacuation warning for the Palisades, Sunset and Hurst burn scar areas ahead of the rain Monday. That warning went into effect at 9 p.m. on Sunday and will be in place until 9 a.m. on Tuesday.

    Most of L.A. County is under a flood watch as a powerful rainstorm hits the region, that's in effect until midnight Monday. Areas that include much of Central and Southern L.A. County are additionally under a flash flood warning until 2 p.m. Monday. That's due to an observed rainfall rate that's between 0.5 to 0.75 inches in 15 minutes.

    Some mountain communities are also under a winter storm warning through Thursday where up to a foot or two of snow is possible for elevations above 6,000 feet.

    Forecasters are also warning that it's going to be windy along mountain passes where gusts could reach up to 70 mph Monday afternoon.

    Rainfall totals

    Chart indicates when rainfall is expected.
    Weather forecast this week for Southern California.
    (
    Courtesy NWS
    )

    Widespread rain began to fall on Southern California overnight, as of 11 a.m. Monday here are preliminary rainfall totals over the last 24 hours, reported by the National Weather Service:

    • Agoura: 1.66 inches
    • Bel Air: .78 inches
    • Canoga Park: 1.25 inches
    • Downtown L.A. .11 inches
    • Eaton Dam: .50 inches

    Evacuations and closures

    We will update as needed.

    According to the National Weather Service, locations that will experience flash flooding include Monday afternoon: Long Beach, West Covina, Glendora, San Dimas, Pomona, Whittier, La Verne, Covina, Azusa, Baldwin Park, Diamond Bar, Hacienda Heights, Monrovia, Claremont, Santa Fe Springs, Norwalk, Cerritos, Artesia, Bellflower and Walnut.

    Traffic conditions

    Rancho Palos Verdes

    • As of Monday afternoon: Rancho Palos Verdes Drive South is closed in both directions from Wayfarers Chapel to Peppertree Drive due to flooding. Please use an alternate route if you must drive at this time. It is unknown when the road will reopen.

    San Fernando Valley

    • As of Monday afternoon: The 5 Freeway north is closed in Sun Valley from Tuxford Street and Lankershim Boulevard because of flooding.

    Orange County

    Forecast

    Meteorologists for the National Weather Service have warned that a powerful storm system will move through the region Monday "bringing the potential for severe thunderstorms, burn-scar debris flows, flash flooding with rock and mud slides, damaging winds, heavy mountain snow, and high surf with coastal flooding."

    They say Southern Californians should expect "cold and blustery conditions with periodic rain" through "at least the middle of the week."

    The expected rainfall is significant enough that they're warning people near vulnerable areas, which include recent burn scars from last January's fires and other recent fires, to take precautions immediately and be ready to leave if evacuation orders are issued.

    Severe weather could include:

    • Small tornadoes
    • 60 mph or higher winds
    • Rainfall rates that hit 1 inch per hour or more

    Understanding National Weather Service warnings

    Here’s an excerpt from our guide to understanding flood warnings, if any are issued:

    • Flood advisories are how the NWS begins to raise the alarm. The goal is to give people enough time to take action.
    • Flood watches are your indicators to get prepared to move.
    • A flood warning is issued when a hazardous weather event is imminent or already happening. When one is issued for your area, you need to get to higher ground immediately.
    • A flash flood warning is issued when a flash flood is coming or in progress. Flash floods are sudden and violent floods that can start within minutes.

    Read more: Flash Flood warnings? Watches? Here’s what you need to know

    Tips for driving in the rain

    Advice on driving in the rain:

    • Check weather and road conditions all along your planned route.
    • Slow down.
    • Keep a wider-than-usual distance between your vehicle and the one in front.
    • Don't drive through standing water — as little as 12 inches of rushing water can carry away most cars, and two feet can carry away SUVs and trucks.
    • Make sure tires are fully inflated.
    • Check windshield wiper blades and replace if necessary.

    Read more: What you should do if you end up driving in a flooded area

    Downed tree, power line or flooded road?

    Dial 911 in an emergency.

    However, if you need to report a flooded road or a downed tree, you can call the following non-emergency numbers:

    • L.A. city: Dial 311 for a flooded road or downed tree. Call (800) DIAL-DWP if you see a downed power line.
    • L.A. County: (800) 675-HELP
    • Ventura County: (805) 384-1500
    • Orange County: (714) 955-0200 or visit here.

    If you're in L.A. County and need sand bags, you can find some at local fire houses.

    Staying safe when the winds are high

    • Watch for traffic signals that may be out. Approach those intersections as four-way stops.
    • Make sure you have a battery-operated radio and flashlights. Check the batteries to make sure they are fresh. Use flashlights for lighting during a power outage; do not use candles because they may pose a fire hazard.
    • If you’re in a vehicle with a fallen power line on it, stay in the vehicle and remain calm until help arrives. It is OK to use your cellphone to call 911. If you must leave the vehicle, exit away from downed power lines and jump from the vehicle, landing with both feet together. You must not touch the vehicle and the ground at the same time. Then proceed away from the vehicle by shuffling and not picking up your feet until you are several yards away. 
    • Water and electricity don’t mix. Water is an excellent conductor of electricity. Do not step in or enter any water that a downed power line may be touching.
    • Do not use any equipment indoors that is designed for outdoor heating or cooking. Such equipment can emit carbon monoxide and other toxic gases.
    • If you use a generator, place it outdoors and plug individual appliances directly into it, using a heavy-duty extension cord. Connecting generators directly to household circuits creates “backfeed,” which is dangerous to repair crews.
    • Leave the doors of your refrigerator and freezer closed to keep food as fresh as possible. Place blocks of ice inside to help keep food cold. Check food carefully for signs of spoilage. 
    • Check on your neighbors to make sure everyone is safe.

    Tips on staying warm

    • State law requires residential units to have heating systems that can keep indoor temperatures at a minimum of 70 degrees. That means every dwelling unit and guest room offered for rent or lease should offer heating equipment.
    • Use heat smartly to save money: Cranking heaters can be expensive. If money is tight, be judicious about how and when you use your utilities. For example, only use heaters at night or only set the thermostat to around 70 degrees.
    • Open and close those vents: If you have central A/C, look at where the vents are around your home. Are any open in places where you don’t stay long? Practice opening and closing those so warm air only goes where you need it (most vents should have a small toggle lever). Humidifiers can also help you warm things up — and it’s useful to add moisture into our dry air.
    • Adjust your wall heaters: If you have a wall heater, you can change the output by adjusting the knob (usually at the bottom). Since wall heaters can only warm the areas where they’re placed, it’s essential to close doors to rooms you won’t be in so hot air doesn’t get wasted.
    • Turn on your ceiling fan (really): If you have a ceiling fan, try turning it on. This sounds counterintuitive, but there’s science behind it. Since hot air floats up, your fan can help move it around. For warming, your fan should spin clockwise to create an updraft. Not all fans will have this option.

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    How we're reporting on this

    This is a developing story. We fact check everything and rely only on information from credible sources (think fire, police, government officials and reporters on the ground). Sometimes, however, we make mistakes or initial reports turn out to be wrong. In all cases, we strive to bring you the most accurate information in real time and will update this story as new information becomes available.

  • Actor was known the 'Godfather,' 'Apocalypse Now'

    Topline:

    Robert Duvall, who brought a wide range of characters to life, from tough Marines to wistful, tender-hearted cowboys over a long career, has died at 95.

    His career: Duvall appeared in over 90 films over the course of his career, imbuing stock Hollywood types — cowboys, cops, soldiers — with a nuanced sense of vulnerability.

    What we know about his death: Duvall died on Sunday. His wife Luciana posted on Facebook on Monday, "Yesterday we said goodbye to my beloved husband, cherished friend, and one of the greatest actors of our time. Bob passed away peacefully at home, surrounded by love and comfort."

    Over his long career, Robert Duvall brought a wide range of characters to life, from tough Marines to wistful, tender-hearted cowboys.

    Duvall died on Sunday. His wife Luciana posted on Facebook on Monday, "Yesterday we said goodbye to my beloved husband, cherished friend, and one of the greatest actors of our time. Bob passed away peacefully at home, surrounded by love and comfort."

    He was 95 years old.

    In his first major movie role, in 1962, Robert Duvall appeared in only a handful of scenes. He didn't have a single word of dialogue. Yet the actor managed to make an indelible, star-making impression. The film was To Kill a Mockingbird. The role was Boo Radley.

    Boo is the small town's recluse; he spends the movie as little more than a mysterious shape, cloaked in shadows. But in the film's final moments, he steps out nervously, into the light.

    Duvall's features soften, he smiles slightly — and the menacing presence of Boo Radley transforms before our eyes into a figure radiating kindness and concern. The pure, elegantly nuanced physicality of that moment launched his career.

    Robert Duvall came from a military family. He told NPR's All Things Considered in 2010 that he didn't so much discover acting as have it thrust upon him by his parents.

    "I was at a small college in the Midwest," he said. "It was the end of the Korean war. I did go in the army eventually but [only] to get through college, to find something that would give me a sense of worth, where I got my first 'A'. It was my parents I had to thank for that."


    As a young actor, he ended up in New York City, where he palled around with Gene Hackman, James Caan and his roommate Dustin Hoffman. It was over many coffees and conversations with them at Cromwell's Drug Store on 50th and 6th Avenue that he struck upon his personal philosophy of acting. His approach was direct and unpretentious, as he explained to the TV series Oprah's Masterclass in 2015: "Basically just talk and listen, and keep it simple. And however it goes, it goes."

    After Mockingbird, his parts grew bigger: Films like Bullitt, True Grit, and M*A*S*H, in which he originated the role of the uptight Major Frank Burns.

    But it was his role in 1972's The Godfather, as Tom Hagen, the Corleone family lawyer, that changed everything. Amid the film's operatic swirl of emotion, Tom Hagen was an island of calmness and restraint, so it might seem odd that Duvall often said it was one of his favorite roles of his career.

    But his strength as an actor was always how unforced he seemed, how true. Others around him emoted, showily and outwardly — he always directed his energy inward, to find a character's heart. This was true even when he played roles with a harder edge.

    In two films that came out in 1979 — The Great Santini and Apocalypse Now, both of which earned him Oscar nominations — Duvall played military men. In Santini, he was a bluff, belligerent Marine who bullied his sensitive son in an attempt to harden him into a man.

    In Francis Ford Coppola's epically trippy Vietnam War film Apocalypse Now, Duvall was all charismatic swagger as Lieutenant Colonel Kilgore, who calls down an airstrike and delivers one of the most quotable lines in film history: "I love the smell of napalm in the morning. ... It smells like ... victory."

    As he told Terry Gross on Fresh Air in 1996, the words followed him for the rest of his life.

    "Yeah, that was a wonderful line," he said. "People come up to me and quote it to me like it's this in thing between me and them. Like they're the only ones who ever thought of it, but it happens with everyone in the same way."

    He finally won the Oscar for 1983's Tender Mercies. He played a recovering alcoholic country singer trying to start his life over. Duvall did his own singing in that film.

    He directed 1997's The Apostle, which he also wrote, produced and starred in, as an evangelical preacher on the outs with God. It earned him his fifth Oscar nomination for acting.

    Over the course of an acting career that spanned decades, Duvall appeared in over 90 films. He took traditional, old Hollywood archetypes of masculinity — soldiers, cops and cowboys — and imbued them with notes of melancholy, a vulnerability that made them come alive onscreen.

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