Conservation and Outdoor Recreation for the spokesman review which is washingtons second largest newspaper so hes a busy guy. His one place would bespokane washington. Despite his workload he has saved some of his writing energy to write a book about a phenomenon he was seeing something larger happening while he was reporting that her return of the wolf and has he covered for the paper i found the publics passionate response revealed a more complex story he followed to create this book. Hes joined by erica barry, the author of wolfish, a book that tries to understand our myths about wolves tracks rtone through the mountains of oregon. If you think of a good question during the conversation keep it, all on to it because hopefully we will have time for a question and answer and as you have noticed cspan is here ontonight so if you have questions wait for audio to put the microphone therefore you. Finally, afterwards eli will be up here to sign books for you so youre going to wind up here
kevin corke is live. good evening. kevin: problems aplenty nationwide as you pointed out. millions of americans struggling with food and gas and housing costs. to say nothing of the crisis along the southern border. and the reason mass shootings. well, with all that happening, as you said, the biden administration instead appears to be focused on the airline industry, announcing today it will propose a rule requiring all airlines to compensate fires for the costs of meals and hotels, texas, the right years, and rebooking fees when the airlines are the ones to blame for canceled or delayed flights. but critics, yes, acknowledging perhaps the novelty of that i idea, there s still questioning tonight, the white house s fo focus. there are multiple things that the president and he can talk about the potential manufacturing crisis that house republicans have put forth. kevin: walk, talk, and chew gum. this is all happening as the latest washington post abc news poll shows
and we celebrate a0 years of christmas classic, the snowman, and its iconic soundtrack, walking in the air. good morning. it s christmas eve. our top story. around 250 million people in the us and canada are under severe weather warnings, as an unprecedented winter storm sweeps across north america. from alaska to texas, bone chilling temperatures, blizzards and icy winds have caused widespread disruption and left more than a million homes and businesses without power. at least 12 deaths have been linked to the conditions. tom brada reports. once ina once in a generation whether out of the worst possible time. ice, wind, rain and extreme cold are wreaking havocin rain and extreme cold are wreaking havoc in the build up to christmas. trees have been ripped from the ground and power lines have been knocked out across the country. from maine to texas, more than i million people are without electricity. people are very frustrated because we pay our bills. all day it has been goin
jeopardising a deal to allow grain to leave the city. now on bbc news: life at 50 degrees: the town that burnt down in a day. when i was growing up, my grandmother used to tell me that we lived here forever. there s this collective conscious knowledge that is handed down from generation to generation. what you do to the land, you do to yourselves. that is how i was raised. but since a child i have seen changes in ecosystems, i ve seen less water, i ve seen the trees struggling with drought and heat anxiety. if you abuse the land, climate change is a logical consequence. and this weekend, temperature records could be shattered across the province. a new all time record i of 49.5 degrees celsius. the hot spot of course in lytton, british columbia. holy bleep. my daughter is asking every- day, the town s burnt, mom? it is all you re left. with, just memories. let s make some noise for fairy creek! we have fires all around the world destroying unprecedented amounts. all we want
hello, this is bbc news. the headlines. holidaymakers and hauliers face a third day of disruption at the channel tunnel. delays around the port of dover appear to have eased, but other travellers spent all night stuck in queues. at folkestone about 9am yesterday morning for a train at 10.30, and then we slowly have been crawling along for the past 21 plus hours. the entire board of cricket scotland resigns ahead of a review expected to find scottish cricket to be institutionally racist. russia admits it was responsible for a missile strike on the port of odesa on saturday targeting military installations, ukraine s president denounced the attack as barbaric . rishi sunak and liz truss vow to toughen controls on migration, in their latest announcements in the conservative leadership race. with more countries fighting wildfires, the us special envoy for climatejohn kerry tells the bbc that president biden is considering whether to announce a climate emergency. we are moving fo