Hello and welcome to verified life. The United Nations has warned that catastrophic shortages of essential goods in gaza could result in many more deaths. The head of its agency for Palestinian Refugees described the amount of aid allowed in so far as crumbs. Philippe lazzarini says basic services are crumbling, with streets starting to overflow with sewage. A World Health Organization official says patients are being operated on without anaesthetic, with bodies lying everywhere in hospitals. The Un Human Rights Office says it has warned israel that cutting off food, fuel and electricity constitutes collective punishment. Israels military says it carried out another ground raid in gaza overnight to target hamas fighters. These pictures, supplied by the idf, are said to show a Hamas Tunnel Being struck by a guided missile. Launch sites for anti tank missiles and command and control centres were also reportedly hit; the army said it killed a senior hamas commander. As tension continues
yet it keeps going and going and going. so what really is going on here? will a new bill just passed in the house to fund the faa do anything to alleviate some of the pressure for travelers? some doubting. hi. how are you? welcome. i m neil cavuto. i was expecting music. probably best we don t worry. it s that bad. to grady trimble at reagan national airport in the thick of this. what flyers can look forward or the or not lock forward to this weekend. grady? fortunately here, neil, a handful of delays on the flight board. i ll get to the more broad travel troubles in a second. i want to start with a flight out of vegas, the delta flight. the department of transportation says they want to get to the bottom of exactly what happened, what caused passengers to have to sit on that plane for hours in extreme heat as you mentioned. 111 degrees outside of the plane. no air conditioning inside.
here in a community of about 1,000 here in which the water and the mud just overtook the homes here in this community. you can see lifted up this boat, brought it over here. the part is about half of the residents here waited out the storm, unable to leave and are still attempting to live here to this day despite the circumstances. there s an individual living in this trailer here that was obliterated. if you pan over to the right you can see they ve begun to be able to clear the road to make it somewhat accessible for folks here. you can see the amount of devastation. this gentleman s home is sitting up here on his porch right now because of the lack of air conditioning inside, the lack of power inside here. you can see this was a home that was built after katrina when the homes were essentially lifted up off the ground. you can see our photojournalist derek will zoom in to the stairs, you can see how high the water, that pink towel that is up there is how high the water went. you can
steel siding, that had plastic, very strong plastic ceiling and ground. we believe that the structure where the children are living. we are told at this point that everybody is healthy. right now it is 95 degrees outside here. we are told there s air-conditioning inside, but there s a lot of concern in this community about those children, because of the high temperatures here and because of the remoteness of this area. i want to show you quick, wolf, tis is the desert. we re in the middle of nowhere. only 1500 people live in this town. gary, thank you so much. there s breaking news ahead. investigators say they ve reconstructed 16 pages of shredded documents collected in the raid on michael cohen back in april. all next week cnn will have a series about individuals and organizations who have made an extraordinary difference in people s lives. take a look. all next week, a special cnn
electricity. i hope my husband s not watching. he s obsessed with that. to your point, 50 to 65% of energy used in buildings is used by tenants. my wife is a trustee for the national resources defense counsel and funded the markets for innovation. one of our big projects right now is working with tenants, not just buildings but tenants, developing a tenant model to consume less electricity. the empire state building all tenants are using less than 3 watts a foot including air-conditioning, including u.s. deposit. and energy? 5-6 regular. cutting it in half. not paying for stuff you don t need. no compromise, no darker, hotter, holder, no compromise. i think the big idea here is again we all go around and ask