This Christmas is going to be different from years past; everything from how you celebrate to the gifts you give and receive. Dr. Nicole Bruno from Island Coast Pediatrics is here to go over some healthy, utilitarian present ideas.

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A Holocaust survivor shared his story about how he was able to survive, how a piece of paper and the bravery of a leader on a different landmass saved his life and gave him back his freedom.

Holocaust survivor Robert Nossen, an educator, was born to German Jewish parents.

“I was born in Holland, or the Netherlands, in 1938,” Nossen said.

Nossen’s family left Germany in 1936 because they feared Adolf Hitler and the direction he was steering Germany, but safety in the Netherlands didn’t last long.

“Amsterdam eventually became the ghetto for all Jews in Holland in 1942 when they started doing roundups,” Nossen explained.

The Nazi’s sent Nossen’s family to the Westerbork concentration camp, but because his father was a chemist, he got sent back so he could work.

“When we came back from the camp in 1943, we got these papers, and that changed our life,” Nossen said.

These were papers that showed the Nossens were citizens of El Salvador.

“There’s no question in my mind that the odds are I would not have survived the war without that,” Nossen said.

Col. Jose Arturo Castellanos of El Salvador is a hero of the war. He helped save 40,000 Jewish people from the Holocaust, and Nossen is one of them.

“Some people went out of their way to help, you know, the Jews, wasn’t just one sided,” Nossen said. “And that’s the important thing to understand how important these people were, how many people were saved by being hidden”

The Holocaust Museum & Cohen Education Center in North Naples is honoring Castellanos. Nossen talked to Castellanos’ two grandsons, praising their grandfather’s bravery.

“We want to tell our story. We want our story to be told and also the stories of people that help the Jews,” Nossen said.

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A Bradenton woman stuffed the body of a 40-year-old man into a trash can after he died to keep collecting his Social Security benefits, investigators said.

Michelle Haney, 48, was arrested Wednesday by Manatee County Sheriff’s deputies and is now facing charges of abuse of a corpse, news outlets reported.

Investigators said Haney told them Jon Christopher Leonard died in July of what appeared to be natural causes. His body was found in a trash can being stored at a neighbor’s home.

Haney and Leonard had been living together at the time. Instead of calling authorities, investigators said Haney stored Leonard’s body in a closet, before sealing it in a trash can three weeks later.

She then took the trash can to a neighbor’s house, and told the neighbor that she’d be back for it later. Investigators said the neighbor was apparently unaware of what was inside. He called authorities after he smelled an odor and opened the container.

Haney told investigators that she kept the body so she could continue receiving his benefits.

She remains in the Manatee County Jail on $7,500 bail.

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A U.S. government advisory panel endorsed widespread use of Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine Thursday, putting the country just one step away from launching an epic vaccination campaign against the outbreak that has killed close to 300,000 Americans.

Shots could begin within days, depending on how quickly the Food and Drug Administration signs off, as expected, on the expert committee’s recommendation.

In a 17-4 vote with one abstention, the government advisers concluded that the vaccine from Pfizer and its German partner BioNTech appears safe and effective for emergency use in adults and teenagers 16 and older.

That endorsement came despite questions about allergic reactions in two people who received the vaccine earlier this week when Britain became the first country to begin dispensing the Pfizer-BioNTech shot.

Despite all the remaining unknowns, in an emergency, “the question is whether you know enough,” said panel member Dr. Paul Offit of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, who concluded that the shot’s potential benefits outweigh its risks.

The independent review by non-government experts in vaccine development, infectious diseases and medical statistics was considered critical to boosting Americans’ confidence in the safety of the shot, which was developed at breakneck speed less than a year after the virus was identified.

The decision came as COVID-19 cases surge to ever-higher levels across the U.S., with deaths hitting an all-time, one-day high of more than 3,100 on Wednesday.

Gov. Ron DeSantis said Thursday that the state will get about 179,400 doses, with 97,500 going to the state’s five pilot hospitals for their high-contact and high-exposure personnel. Another 60,450 will go to CVS and Walgreens for administration at long-term care facilities, and 21,450 will go to the Department of Health for outreach.

Two doses of the vaccine are needed for it to be effective. Distribution is expected to begin next week.

Pfizer has said it will have about 25 million doses of the two-shot vaccine for the U.S. by the end of December. But the initial supplies will be reserved primarily for health care workers and nursing home residents, with other vulnerable groups next in line until ramped-up production enables shots to become widely available on-demand – something that will probably not happen until the spring.

The FDA next week will review a second vaccine, from Moderna and the National Institutes of Health, that appears about as protective as Pfizer-BioNTech’s shot. A third candidate, from Johnson & Johnson, which would require just one dose, is working its way through the pipeline. Behind that is a candidate from AstraZeneca and Oxford University.

U.S. health experts are hoping a combination of vaccines will ultimately enable the U.S. to conquer the outbreak.

But experts estimate at least 70% of the U.S. population will have to be vaccinated to achieve herd immunity, the point at which the virus can be held in check. That means it could be several months before things start get back to normal and Americans can put away their masks.

All eyes now turn to the FDA staff scientists who will make the final decision on whether to press ahead with widespread use of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. FDA’s vaccine director Dr. Peter Marks said ahead of the expert meeting that a decision would come within “days to a week.”

Regulators not only in Britain but in Canada have already approved the vaccine for use in their countries, and President Donald Trump and White House officials have complained for weeks about the pace of FDA’s careful review.

“Americans want us to do a scientific review, but I think they also want us to make sure we’re not wasting time on paperwork as opposed to going forward with the decision,” FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn said before the meeting.

A positive vote for the vaccine was virtually assured after FDA scientists issued a glowing review of the vaccine earlier in the week. Agency staffers said data from Pfizer’s ongoing study of 44,000 people showed strong protection across different age groups, races and health conditions with no major, unexpected safety problems.

The Pfizer-BioNTech shot remains experimental because that final-stage study isn’t complete. As a result, the expert panel wrestled with a list of questions that have yet to be answered.

For example, while the vaccine is more than 90% effective in blocking the symptoms of COVID-19, the FDA’s advisers stressed it is not yet clear whether it can stop the silent, symptomless spread that accounts for up to half of all cases.

“Even though the individual efficacy of this vaccine is very, very, very high, you really as of right now do not have any evidence” that it will lower transmission, said Dr. Patrick Moore of the University of Pittsburgh. He urged Pfizer to take additional steps to answer that question.

The advisers worried, too, that Pfizer will lose its opportunity to answer critical questions as it begins offering the real vaccine to study participants who had been getting dummy shots up to now.

The company proposed gradually moving those patients to the vaccine group, with priority based on age, health conditions and other factors. Under that plan, 70-year-old participants would cross over before healthy 30-year-olds.

Pfizer must still show whether the vaccine works in children younger than 16 and in pregnant women.

On the safety front, as widespread vaccinations begin, the first recipients will be closely tracked by government health authorities since studies in tens of thousands of people can’t detect rare risks that strike 1 in a million. Hanging over the meeting were the British allergic reactions and a warning from authorities there that people with a history of serious reactions shouldn’t get the vaccine for now.

Pfizer representatives said they have seen no signs of allergic reactions in their trial. But some of the FDA advisers fear the British warning will deter millions of Americans with allergies who might benefit from the COVID-19 vaccine from giving it a try, and urged additional studies to try to settle the issue.

“This issue is not going to die until we have better data,” Offit said.

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It took hours to put out a huge fire that destroyed a south Fort Myers business early Thursday.

The fire happened at Cable Company of America, along Amedicus Lane near Crystal Drive and Metro Parkway.

Investigators said late Thursday afternoon that the cause of the fire is undetermined. The blaze was so big that three fire departments were called to fight it.

The calls made by firefighters over dispatch were countless and urgent.

“We got a lotta fire. I could use at least one or two more crews…”

“The south side, the roof has completely collapsed. There’s quite a bit of fire inside but you can’t get to it…”

The fire was raging inside a wire and cable company.

“Be advised, on the outside of that building, you have 5 or 6 propane tanks…”

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How often do you change your masks, and how often do you wash them? The guidelines for proper mask maintenance may be more stringent than you think.

We’ve been wearing masks for months, many of us purchasing cloth ones. But how long do they really last before we should throw them out?

Not as long as you may think, according to Dr. Bindu Mayi, a professor at Nova Southeastern University. She says that typically a cloth mask can withstand about 30-40 wears at most, and we should be washing them every single day. Surgical masks should be used only once.

Mayi gave some warning signs of what your cloth mask may start to look like when it’s becoming ineffective.

“I have a nose piece that has a tighter fit around my nose so that may become loose, it might start gaping more,” Mayi said. “If you hold it up to the light, you’ll see that it starts to look frayed. So those are the kind of things that you don’t want to have.”

Mayi added that you should be hand-washing your mask rather than throwing it in your washer or dryer. She says with cases surging, we all have a responsibility to protect ourselves and each other.

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After a hazy morning across Southwest Florida, we are finally starting to warm up! With plenty of dry air, highs will peak in the low-mid 70s with plentiful sunshine.

Friday morning will feature lows in the upper 40s and lower 50s with another mild afternoon, a bit warmer than today.

Enjoy these nicer conditions before more humidity, a few showers, and patchy fog returns by this weekend!

A cold front comes through by Monday which will increase our rain chances once again before cooler and drier air moves back in.

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This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without prior written consent.

Lawmakers are running out of time to pass another coronavirus relief package before Congress adjourns for the holidays. A major point of contention: whether the U.S. will offer Americans another stimulus check, the direct cash payments that helped millions of households weather the economic crunch caused by pandemic.

A bipartisan $908 billion proposal would leave out stimulus payments, focusing instead on providing jobless workers with an additional $300 in weekly unemployment aid. On December 8, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin also proposed a $916 billion package that would provide stimulus checks worth $600 per person, although it would cut back on unemployment aid, according to the Wall Street Journal. A Treasury Department spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Meanwhile, some senators, including Bernie Sanders of Vermont, are insisting that any new relief bill include another round of checks worth $1,200 for low- and middle-income Americans — the same amount offered under the $2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act this spring.

“If Congress can afford to give giant subsidies to the fossil fuel industry and a $1 trillion tax break to the top 1%, then we can afford $1200 direct payments to every working class adult in America,” Sanders wrote on Twitter on December 8.


The politically fraught debate over additional stimulus funding is leaving millions of households in the dark about what aid, if any, they might receive over the next few weeks. For many people, the financial picture is dimming as winter approaches and coronavirus cases reach new daily highs.

At the end of November, more consumers said they were feeling a financial impact from the COVID-19 crisis, reaching almost 6 in 10 people and representing the second consecutive monthly increase of hardship, according to a new survey from TransUnion. Job growth around the U.S. also slowed sharply in November, raising concerns the economic recovery is losing steam.

Some consumers, meanwhile, say they need far more than another one-time payment of $1,200 to help them survive until the coronavirus vaccine is widely available next year.

“As we near the end of 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic rages on. And so do the economic consequences,” wrote Denver, Colorado, restaurant owner Stephanie Bonin in a Change.org petition calling for Congress to provide people with $2,000 a month, which has received nearly 2 million signatures. “My small business is suffering and my family is afraid – and I know I’m not alone.”

Good news, bad news

The Treasury Department’s stimulus plan, which is backed by the White House, offers both good and bad news for cash-strapped Americans, according to Height Securities analyst Hunter Hammond. On the one hand, it suggests the Trump administration is willing to discuss a larger stimulus package, but it also muddies the waters for earlier negotiations on the bipartisan $908 billion plan. It also heightens “the push for direct payments,” Hammond wrote in a research note.

“We expect all sides will continue to negotiate and make offers, but investors should not expect a final deal (if one is reached) until the end of the week,” he added.

Lawmakers are likely to agree on funding for supplemental unemployment aid, which will expire on December 26 for some 12 million jobless workers, Hammond said.

In the meantime, Congress remains deadlocked over the inclusion of provisions on state and local funding, sought by Democrats, and COVID-19 liability protections Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has prioritized. Mnuchin said his offer includes funding for state and local governments as well as the liability shield, which would shield businesses, schools and other organizations from lawsuits charging them with failing to protect people from the virus.

But Mnuchin’s offer would also cut unemployment aid from the $180 billion proposed by the bipartisan bill to $40 billion, according to a joint statement from Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer. Cutting jobless aid “is unacceptable,” they said on December 8.

In the meantime, millions of U.S. families are struggling to pay their bills and layoffs remain historically high. Among consumers who have been affected by the pandemic, about 8 in 10 are concerned about their ability to pay their bills – with half saying they’re worried about affording their rent or mortgage, according to TransUnion.

“Nearly two in five impacted consumers say they really need a future stimulus check and don’t know how they will get by without,” the credit reporting agency found.

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A man took matters into his own hands after seeing a car swerve in and out of lanes during morning rush hour Wednesday.

It all happened along US-41 near Limetree Park in Bonita Springs at 7 a.m.

Matt King told us he followed the car for about a mile. He rolled down his window and was trying to tell the driver to pull over.

King said he had just dropped off his little boy at day care and was on his way to work when he caught the car he was following on camera hitting another on US-41.

“I was driving down Coconut Point mall, and I saw this car swerving off the road, ramping through ditches, just, it was crazy,” King explained.

King said he followed the car because worried they were going to hurt somebody.

“I had to chase him down to get him to stop,” King said.

After the driver hit the other car, King says they kept going.

“You just hit that guy back there. Pullover man,” King could be heard saying on his recording.

People who drive this road every day were shocked to see the video.

“Oh, my gosh,” Noreen Campbell said. “It’s really scary and awful.”

“Obviously, could have killed somebody, caused a serious accident,” Steven Gunther said. “Thankfully, it was only maybe property damage.”

King says he is glad he was able to get the car to pull over when he did.

“I was just trying to keep everyone from getting hurt,” King said. “I just wanted people to be safe.”

King told us the woman who was hit had her kids in the car. Everyone was OK.

Lee County Sheriff’s Office says the man driving the other car received a citation for the crash.

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