WAER News Round Up: Feb. 6-10

This week, a 3.8 earthquake centered east of Buffalo in the suburb of West Seneca at about Monday; Gov. Kathy Hochul visited Syracuse touting her executive budget; Micron revealed details of their plans at two town hall events in Onondaga County.

Catch up on more of the week's news below:

1. Strongest earthquake in 40 years startles western New York

A map shows the epicenter of the earthquake that struck western New York Monday, Feb. 6, 2023.
United States Geological Survey

A small earthquake rumbled through western New York early this Monday, alarming people in a region unaccustomed to such shaking.

2. Zeldin, former GOP candidate for governor, is not ruling out a new run for office

Lee Zeldin, former Republican candidate for New York governor, speaks Feb. 6, 2023, at the annual meeting of the state's Conservative Party in Albany. At right is state Conservative Party Chair Gerard Kassar.
Karen DeWitt

In his first news conference since narrowly losing the 2022 election to Gov. Kathy Hochul, Lee Zeldin offered a critique of Hochul’s performance and hinted that he will be a candidate for office again sometime soon.

3.Hochul stops in Syracuse to tout Micron prep, student mental health care in proposed budget

Governor Kathy Hochul highlights her Fiscal Year 2024 Executive Budget in Syracuse, Feb. 6, 2023.
Darren McGee-Office of Governor

Gov. Kathy Hochul came to Syracuse Monday to showcase what’s inside her executive budget and how Central New York will be impacted.

4. Groups say Hochul's plan for housing would help address high costs, lack of units

Two houses in a Syracuse neighborhood sit next to each other.
Brad Spelich

Groups in favor of Gov. Kathy Hochul’s ambitious plan to build 800,000 new housing units over the next several years met Tuesday at the state Capitol to show their support.

5. Micron gives details on workforce development and local hiring plans at Syracuse town hall

County Executive Ryan McMahon and Syracuse Mayor Ben Walsh are joined by Micron representatives in Henninger High School's cafeteria for a town hall event in Syracuse. Feb. 7, 2023.
City of Syracuse/ @syracuse1848

Micron provided details on its local workforce partnerships and future hiring at its latest town hall in Syracuse.

6. Jamesville closure raises concerns about accommodating shifts in jail population

Chris Bolt
WAER News

There are still plenty of lingering questions now that it appears Jamesville Correctional Facility will close. That could present new challenges regarding any shifts in the jail population.

7. City residents voice concerns over Syracuse's new sanitation cart plan

Trash bins sit outside houses on Madison St. Syracuse, NY, Mar. 7, 2022.
Maxwell Mimaroglu

Syracuse residents provided their input on a proposed sanitation cart system that would change the way trash is collected in the city.

8. Dozens apply to new Syracuse Police Junior Cadet program

Paid training will begin in March to help fill Syracuse Police Department's staff shortages and aid retention.
Maxwell Mimaroglu

The Syracuse Police Department is interviewing applicants for its new Cadet Program: a 50-week, paid training to help grow the number of new recruits.

9. Students want a more inclusive curriculum, new survey confirms

The YouthTruth survey consulted over 28,000 students across 19 states, determining that more classes need a diverse curriculum.
Andrew MacBeath

While controversy rages on about the College Board's Advanced Placement African American Studies course, Black students in a new survey showed they want a more inclusive curriculum.

10. Local artist honors victims of Syracuse gun violence in new mural

Syracuse artist Victor Matthews was commissioned to paint a mural of recent victims of gun violence, including Brexialee Torres-Ortiz. The mural is set to be unveiled for the family Saturday, inside 308 Otisco St.,
Ashley Kang

The mural is set to be unveiled Saturday on Syracuse’s West Side to honor victims of gun violence.

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Yoki Tang was raised in a big city of China called Shanghai. He speaks Mandarin, Korean and English. His majors are Broadcast Digital Journalism and Selective Study In Education and would be graduated in May 2023. The desire to get the facts right and the quest for accurate facts made Yoki want to study broadcast and journalism in the first place.