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Mar 15, 2012

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thumbnail Midwest in bull's-eye for record high temps
Mar 15th 2012, 16:11

National Climatic Data Center

By msnbc.com staff

Some 400 sites on Wednesday posted record high temperatures for a March 14, according to the National Climatic Data Center -- and most of those were right smack in the Midwest.

Dozens of cities were in the 80s, and the warmth pattern is hardly over: a large swath, from Georgia and Florida to Montana, can expect to see records fall on Thursday, weather.com reported.


On Wednesday, the hottest spots were in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas and Missouri.

Greensburg, Kan., saw the highest temp -- 88 degrees Fahrenheit, 6 degrees warmer than its previous record for a March 14 set in 1935.

High temperature records have been shattered this week from Florida to the U.S.-Canada border, with the variance from normal highs most pronounced in the Northern Plains, where recent temperatures in the 60s were as much as 30 degrees above normal. 

The warm spell is expected to last into early next week.

The unusually warm air east of the Rocky Mountains was courtesy of a high-pressure system trapping cold air farther north, meteorologists said.

"We have a lot of warm, moist air from the Southwest pulling into our area, causing this pleasant weather," Chicago-area National Weather Service meteorologist Amy Seeley said.

Reuters contributed to this report.

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thumbnail New York lawmakers pass sweeping pension cuts
Mar 15th 2012, 15:37

Mike Groll / AP, file

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo says public pension reform was needed to stave off tax hikes.

By msnbc.com staff and news services

ALBANY, N.Y. -- Future public workers in New York will have their retirement benefits cut under a sweeping pension reform measure passed by state lawmakers.

The measure, aimed at reducing future public worker retiree benefit costs by some $80 billion over 30 years, was approved by lawmakers early Thursday morning after Gov. Andrew Cuomo, a first-term Democrat, struck deals with legislative leaders late Wednesday.

The legislation was tied to a clutch of bills that passed, including measures to expand Las Vegas-style casino gambling and the state's criminal DNA database.


"Without this critical reform, New Yorkers would have seen significant tax increases, as well as layoffs to teachers, firefighters and police," Cuomo said in a statement.

The approval was a defeat for labor unions, who claimed they were sold out by Cuomo. New York has the highest union membership rate among states, at just over 24 percent, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“This deal is about politicians standing with the 1 percent — the wealthiest New Yorkers — to give them a better break while telling nurses, bus drivers, teachers, secretaries, and laborers to put up and shut up,” Danny Donohue, the president of the state’s largest union of public workers, the Civil Service Employees Association, was quoted as saying by The New York Times.

Spiraling public-sector employee pension obligations are one of the top financial problems faced by state and local governments across the U.S.

The pension reform reduces retiree benefits for future state and local government workers, increases the amount higher-earning public employees contribute toward their retirement plans, and raises the retirement age by a year to 63, among other measures.

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg applauded the bill.

"Skyrocketing pension costs have caused fiscal crises in many cities and counties around New York, cutting into local governments' ability to deliver core services," Bloomberg said in a statement. "That's why mayors and county executives - from both parties, and from every region in the state - came together to support Governor Cuomo's plan."

A senior official in the Cuomo administration said that the deal will save local governments about $80 billion in pension costs over three decades. Cuomo had proposed a pension overhaul estimated to save $113 billion over three decades and relieve local governments of a growing cost in employer contributions that could threaten solvency. The deal worked out late Wednesday made changes to the plan, reducing the total but still producing a hefty savings.

In striking the deal, Cuomo scaled back the most contentious portion of his pension proposal, which would have given new public workers the option of forgoing a traditional pension and instead choosing a defined contribution plan, similar to a 401(k), according to the Times.

Reuters, The Associated Press and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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thumbnail Like 'Jaws': Girl pulled under by shark twice
Mar 15th 2012, 15:06

WESH-TV's Todd Wilson reports on the shark attacks.

By msnbc.com staff

Two teens, including one who was pulled under twice, have shark survivor stories to tell after being bitten while surfing in New Smyrna Beach, Fla., on Wednesday.

"To me it was like a scene out of 'Jaws' where the girl's getting sucked under," Valey Levy said of watching her daughter being attacked as the two were surfing.

Sydney Levy, 15, went under, resurfaced and "got back on her board, and there was her ankle ... blood coming off of it," her mom told NBC affiliate WESH.com.


 But then the shark grabbed her a second time.

"I said, 'There's no way this thing is going to kill my daughter,' and I grabbed her shoulders, and I pulled her up and threw her on the nose of my board," Levy said. 

Helped by surfers nearby, the two paddled quickly back to shore where first-aid crews were helping Nick Romano, 17, who had been bitten just a short time earlier. It was not known if it was the same shark or not.

"He kind of spun up. His tail flipped up right in front of me," Romano told WESH.com, describing the shark's mouth as being about a foot wide. "My reaction was to shove him right away, and then he swam back down. I stood there and was like, 'I just got bit by a shark.'"

Romano got 17 stitches at the scene, while Sydney Levy was rushed to surgery but was released a few hours later.

WESH.com reported that both teens said they planned to go back into the water -- once they heal.

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