Nation roundup for April 5

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

1 in 38 kids have lead poisoning

1 in 38 kids have lead poisoning

NEW YORK (AP) — More than half a million U.S. children are now believed to have lead poisoning, roughly twice the previous high estimate, health officials reported Thursday.

The increase is the result of the government last year lowering the threshold for lead poisoning, so now more children are considered at risk.

Too much lead can harm developing brains and can mean a lower IQ. Lead poisoning used to be a much larger concern in the United States, but has declined significantly as lead was removed from paint and gasoline and other sources.

The new number translates to about 1 in 38 young children. That estimate suggests a need for more testing and preventive measures, some experts said, but budget cuts last year eliminated federal grant funding for such programs.

Those cuts represent “an abandonment of children,” said David Rosner, a Columbia University public health historian who writes books about lead poisoning.

“We’ve been acting like the problem was solved and this was a thing of the past,” he added.

Lead can harm a child’s brain, kidneys and other organs. High levels in the blood can cause coma, convulsions and death. Lower levels can reduce intelligence, impair hearing and behavior and cause other problems.

Colorado to audit
inmate records

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (AP) — Colorado’s governor announced a sweeping review of the state’s prison and parole operations on Thursday as more evidence piled up showing how a white supremacist gang member slipped through the cracks in the criminal justice system to become a suspect in the killing of the state’s prisons chief.

Evan Ebel was released from prison four years early due to a clerical error, and violated his parole terms five days before the death of Department of Corrections Director Tom Clements.

Officials said the state will now audit inmates’ legal cases to ensure they are serving the correct amount of time. They also will ask the National Institute of Corrections to review the state’s parole system, which is struggling under large caseloads.

The announcement came as authorities said they were looking for two other members of Evan Ebel’s white supremacist prison gang in the first official word that the 211 Crew might be involved. Authorities said the two men were not suspects but “persons of interest” in Clements’ death.

Stocks move up on Wall Street

NEW YORK (AP) — The Dow Jones industrial average closed higher Thursday, regaining half of its decline the day before, as buyers returned to the market.

The Dow rose 55.76 points, or 0.4 percent, to close at 14,606.11. On Wednesday it dropped 111, its worst fall in more than a month, following weak reports on hiring and service industries. The decline was enough to make stock prices seem attractive again.

Search off for Ala. shipyard worker

MOBILE, Ala. (AP) — Divers and Coast Guard rescuers called off a search Thursday for a shipyard worker who was thrown into the water in strong winds that were also blowing when a hobbled cruise ship tore away from its moorings.

The Coast Guard said rescue crews searched the area for 15 hours using 15 boats and aircraft.

“It is always extremely difficult to suspend a search when a person is still missing,” said Capt. Ed Cubanski, chief of response, 8th Coast Guard District.

Authorities, meanwhile, decided to move the 900-foot Carnival Triumph from a private pier to the nearby Mobile Cruise Terminal because it had been impairing search efforts, said Coast Guard Spokesman Lt. Mike Clausen.

“They didn’t want the divers to have to go underneath the cruise ship,” Clausen said, adding that the vessel eventually will return to the shipyard for continued repair work.

Officials identified the missing man as John “Buster” Johnson, 64, an employee for shipyard owner BAE Support Systems since 1997.

Plans also were underway Thursday to extract the ship’s massive anchor from the shipping channel, where it was cut loose after the Triumph broke away from its moorings. The anchor was impeding other channel traffic Thursday, Clausen said.

The worker, one of two employees tossed into the water in hurricane-force winds Wednesday, is an employee of BAE Systems Support Solutions, the company that owns the private dock where the cruise ship is undergoing repairs after being stranded off the coast of Mexico for five days in February. The second worker was rescued. A guard shack on the pier also blew into the water, but it did not appear that either worker was in it at the time, said BAE spokesman John Measell.

It was in the same winds that tore the Triumph from the dock. The ship then lumbered downriver and crunched into a cargo ship. It drifted for a couple of hours before being secured about 5 p.m. Wednesday, Carnival spokesman Vance Gulliksen said.

The Triumph was at the dock for repairs after the engine fire left the ship adrift without power for five days, subjecting thousands of passengers and crew to horrendous conditions including food shortages and raw sewage running in corridors.

A 20-foot gash about 2 to 3 feet wide was visible about halfway up the hull from the water and it wrapped partway around the stern. Underneath the gashed area, two levels of railing were dangling and broken. Electric cables that had been plugged in on shore were dangling from the port side of the ship.

Gulliksen said an assessment of damage to the ship was ongoing and that all of Carnival’s 600 crew members and 200 contractors who were working aboard the vessel would remain on the ship. Gulliksen said the company had no plans to rename the troubled Triumph.

The pier where the ship was docked wasn’t damaged but one adjacent to it was when the ship bumped into it, Measell said.