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Isabel’s morning briefing

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* ICYMI: Alaska Airlines CEO: We found ‘many’ loose bolts on our Max 9 planes. NBC

* Related stories…

* Isabel’s top picks…

* Here’s the rest of your morning roundup…

posted by Isabel Miller
Wednesday, Jan 24, 24 @ 7:38 am

Comments

  1. I support cleaner air but still have my worries of unintended consequences from the natural gas ban.

    If these new units have all electric heating instead of gas will we have more people in northern U.S. freezing during ice storm events that take out power lines?

    Comment by hisgirlfriday Wednesday, Jan 24, 24 @ 9:13 am

  2. Boeing has really shot themselves in the foot due to chasing infinite shareholder growth.

    Glad to see a company finally face consequences for its greed, hopefully, it doesn’t kill any more than it already has before airlines move on from Boeing (many have died overseas, the crash in Ethiopia comes to mind. By the way, this was blamed on inexperienced/incapable pilots, before it came out that the Max 9 needed retraining, despite Boeing saying otherwise. Wild that they haven’t faced push back for that).

    Such a shame a once great name is now a laughing stock. I bet they’re hoping their gambit into missile production pays off, otherwise, the company will be bankrupt soon.

    Comment by That Guy Wednesday, Jan 24, 24 @ 9:17 am

  3. “hopefully, it doesn’t kill any more than it already has”

    We haven’t even started to address ATC issues yet. The recent ground collisions are pointing at more serious problems developing. Unfortunately, it’s probably going to take a tragedy before any action is taken.

    Last Fall, sept 28th, I watched this in the air with my own eyes and still have the screen capture from a flight tracking app of the event taking place.

    A small private plane was flying in the landing path for planes to Midway about 25 miles from the airport. I was watching the flight paths in real time, as well as seeing it in the sky above my house. I watched a 737 (SWA444)coming in on the landing path approaching the path of the small plane. Their paths were going to intersect. I figured surely the small plane would change course at some point. Yet, it wasn’t. At the last minute, the 737 made a sharp bank to the left and then back to the right to avoid the small plane, and then banked back into its planned landing path.

    A mid air collision was missed by a mere few hundred feet. At the same FL.

    Comment by TheInvisibleMan Wednesday, Jan 24, 24 @ 10:25 am

  4. deep concern about all passenger planes in use now. old ones getting replaced by new ones where bolts are loose and door/windows not fit makes one very afraid of family flying. very scary.

    Comment by Amalia Wednesday, Jan 24, 24 @ 10:51 am

  5. ===freezing during ice storm events that take out power lines? ===

    Last I checked, my gas furnace can’t operate without electricity.

    Comment by Rich Miller Wednesday, Jan 24, 24 @ 11:04 am

  6. The difference is with a heat pump, a larger capacity backup generator is needed and if the heat pump uses electric heating assist for very cold weather then it will definitely be out of the class of the small portable generator.
    A gas fired furnace can easily be powered by a small generator. I installed a 40 KW diesel standby generator because of a deep well pump, electric water heaters, etc. but for many years a 5KW portable ensured I could keep both HVAC systems running during a winter outage.

    Comment by former southerner Wednesday, Jan 24, 24 @ 11:13 am

  7. Setting aside the political obstacles of “they’re-taking-away-your-gas-stove,” the biggest concern about phasing out natural gas heating/cooking is whether the electric grid can take on the added demand. It obviously can’t right now or anytime in the next handful of years, but if the phase-out is gradual enough, the grid can probably handle it decades from now. Then again, all the projections on the energy transition are way behind schedule (as that CNI story points out) so instead of saying “decades” we should probably say “many, many decades” from now.

    Comment by TNR Wednesday, Jan 24, 24 @ 11:28 am

  8. @Rich Miller, bingo on furnace. power went out the other day and I was deeply sad feeling the radiators. fireplaces are still useful.

    Comment by Amalia Wednesday, Jan 24, 24 @ 11:42 am

  9. Thanks for the link to the candidate forum info, Isabel. I would not have found out about it but for coming here today.

    Comment by yinn Wednesday, Jan 24, 24 @ 12:01 pm

  10. I think folks are missing the point.

    Yes, your gas furnace requires a small amount of electicity. mainly for the fan. As former southerner points out, that can be supplied by a small generator, which few people in the city have, and which you cannot run in a condo or apartment any way.

    But it can also be supplied by a back-up battery supply, which is becoming more common, and is an obtainable household item starting around $100.

    As TNR points out, part of the issue is whether the electric grid in Chicago can handle the demand of everyone heating their homes all winter long on electric, which it clearly cannot.

    The other issue is that even if you do not have heat, if you have a gas range then you can probably boil water, and you can still cook, and as long as you can boil water and cook you are not going to freeze to death in your house.

    I have slept outside in a tent with temps between 10-20 degrees and while was cold, i still have my fingers and toes.

    The fact is that if Chicago moves forward, as soon as the first person freezes to death in their home during a power outage, the city of Chicago will be blamed, and none of the hypotheticals about gas will matter.

    Comment by Thomas Paine Wednesday, Jan 24, 24 @ 2:38 pm

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