The Emergency in Copper Cliff has been downgraded to Level 1. All roads have re-opened & the alarm turned off.
A.C.T previously in place has been lifted.
The KiSS newsroom will be working on this story throughout the day.

PREVIOUS UPDATES: Copper Cliff residents woke up to an alarming air horn as the morning kicked off with a Level 3 emergency at the Copper Cliff smelter Complex. The Nitrogen Dioxide leak at Vale in Copper Cliff has the Fire Department, Police and Vale officials on the scene. Nitrogen Dioxide affects the respiratory system and can be fatal in large doses. All residents are asked to stay inside, close all doors and windows and turn off furnaces, air conditioners and any other air intakes. CLOSED: Big Nickel Mine Road is closed. Regional 55 is closed in both directions. The Lasalle extension is closed at Frood Road, as well as Elm Street at Big Nickel Mine Road. Stay tuned to KiSS 105.3 for updates as police receive more information. PLEASE DO NOT PHONE 911 TO REQUEST INFORMATION

 

www.time.com
www.time.com

A courtroom artist has apologized to Tom Brady after making the Patriots quarterback look like Lurch from The Addams Family in a now-viral sketch. “Tell Tom Brady I’m sorry,” artist Jane Rosenberg told the New York Daily News on Wednesday after the sketch drew comparisons to the Hunchback of Notre Dame and LSU football coach Les Miles. “He’s a very good-looking man. I apologize. If I had more time, I would have made him more handsome.” Rosenberg, who has worked as a courtroom artist for 35 years, later told The Boston Globe that she doesn’t “tend to flatter people and make them look beautiful.” Brady appeared in court yesterday to contest his four-game Deflategate suspension.

 

www.radaronline.com
www.radaronline.com

In the new issue of Nylon magazine, Kristen Stewart sort of addresses her sexuality and rumored relationship with visual effects producer Alicia Cargile. “Google me, I’m not hiding,” she declares. “But I am an actress, man. I live in the f**king ambiguity of this life and I love it. I don’t feel like it would be true for me to be like, ‘I’m coming out!’ No, I do a job. Until I decide that I’m starting a foundation or that I have some perspective or opinion that other people should be receiving… I don’t. I’m just a kid making movies.” She adds that in another three or four years, there will be more people who “don’t think it’s necessary to figure out if you’re gay or straight.”