For Eligible Americans Booster Shot Programs States Rush ...

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U(D54G1D)y+%!;!]!$!= PHOENIX — After months of delays and blistering criticism, a review of the 2020 election in Ari- zona’s largest county, ordered up and financed by Republicans, has failed to show that former Presi- dent Donald J. Trump was cheated of victory. Instead, the report from the company Cyber Ninjas said it found just the opposite: It tallied 99 additional votes for President Biden and 261 fewer votes for Mr. Trump in Maricopa County, the fast-growing region that includes Phoenix. “Truth is truth and numbers are numbers,” Karen Fann, the Re- publican Senate president who commissioned the vote review, said as the findings were presented to the State Senate on Friday. Mr. Biden won Arizona by roughly 10,500 votes, making his victory of about 45,000 votes in Maricopa County crucial to his win. Under intense pressure from A Maricopa County ballot. POOL PHOTO BY MATT YORK Arizona Review Confirms Biden Had Most Votes This article is by Jack Healy, Mi- chael Wines and Nick Corasaniti. Continued on Page A16 The spread of the Delta variant has delayed office reopenings, dis- rupted the start of school and gen- erally dashed hopes for a return to normal after Labor Day. But it has not pushed the U.S. economic re- covery into reverse. Now that recovery faces a new test: the removal of much of the aid that has helped keep house- holds and businesses afloat for the past year and a half. The Paycheck Protection Pro- gram, which distributed hundreds of billions of dollars in grants and loans to thousands of small busi- nesses, concluded last spring. A federal eviction moratorium ended last month after the Su- preme Court blocked the Biden administration’s last-minute ef- fort to extend it. Most recently, an estimated 7.5 million people lost unemployment benefits when programs that expanded the sys- tem during the pandemic were al- lowed to lapse. Next up: the Federal Reserve, which on Wednesday indicated it could start pulling back its stimu- lus efforts as early as November. The one-two punch of a re- surgent pandemic and waning aid has led Wall Street forecasters, who were once rosy about the economy’s prospects this fall and winter, to turn increasingly glum. Goldman Sachs said this month that it expected third-quarter data to show a decline in consumer spending, the linchpin of the re- covery for the past year. Many economists expect jobs numbers for September to show a second straight month of anemic growth. Yet economists also see impor- tant sources of strength that could Delta Outbreak Tests Economy, And It’s Passing By BEN CASSELMAN Continued on Page A11 AHEAD OF EXPERTS President Biden’s prediction of booster shots for all did not sit well with some scientists who advise him. PAGE A11 WASHINGTON — State health officials rushed on Friday to roll out campaigns to provide corona- virus booster shots for millions of vulnerable people who got the Pfi- zer-BioNTech vaccine and to help a confused public understand who qualifies for the extra shots. Among their challenges: mak- ing sure that recipients of the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines know that they are not yet eligible for boosters, reaching isolated elderly people and in- forming younger adults with med- ical conditions or jobs that place them at higher risk that they might be eligible under the broad federal rules. “Those of us overseeing vac- cine rollouts don’t have a clear idea of what to do,” said Dr. Clay Marsh, West Virginia’s Covid-19 czar. In his state, pharmacies sent staff members into the largest nursing homes on Friday to ad- minister booster doses. In Ver- mont, health officials opened booster shot appointments to peo- ple 80 and older on Friday, and said many other eligible people could get them starting next week. But the state said it was waiting for clarity from the Cen- ters for Disease Control and Pre- vention on which workers and medical conditions would qualify. In virus-battered North Dakota, officials struggling to make sense of the federal guidance delayed a broad booster rollout until next week, with a focus on reaching elderly residents and those in long-term care settings, said Kylie Hall, an adviser to the state’s Health Department. Across the country, vaccine providers are facing the reality that many more people became el- igible for boosters after Dr. Ro- chelle P. Walensky, the C.D.C. di- rector, overruled her expert com- mittee early Friday. She said peo- ple at greater risk of exposure to the virus “because of occupational or institutional setting” would qualify, opening up boosters to millions of people her advisory committee had left out. People 65 and older and resi- dents of long-term care facilities and adults who have certain medi- cal conditions also qualify for the boosters. After Dr. Walensky’s announce- ment, President Biden said 20 mil- lion people could get boosters im- mediately because they had got- ten their second Pfizer-BioNTech shot at least six months ago. In all, he said, 60 million people will be eligible for a Pfizer-BioNTech booster over the coming months. “If you got the Pfizer vaccine in January, February, March of this year and you’re over 65 years of States Rush to Roll Out Booster Shot Programs For Eligible Americans Health Officials Trying to Make Sense of Guidelines on Extra Pfizer Dose This article is by Noah Weiland, Reed Abelson and Jan Hoffman. Continued on Page A12 Britney Spears’s father and the security firm he hired to protect her ran an intense surveillance apparatus that monitored her communications and secretly cap- tured audio recordings from her bedroom, including her interac- tions and conversations with her boyfriend and children, according to a former employee of the secu- rity firm. Alex Vlasov, the employee, sup- ported his claims with emails, text messages and audio recordings he was privy to in his nine years as an executive assistant and opera- tions and cybersecurity manager for Black Box, the security firm. He came forward for a new docu- mentary by The New York Times, “Controlling Britney Spears,” which was released on Friday. Recording conversations in a private place and mirroring text messages without the consent of both parties can be a violation of the law. It is unclear if the court overseeing Ms. Spears’s conser- vatorship was aware of or had ap- proved the surveillance. Mr. Vlasov’s account, and his trove of materials, create the most detailed portrait yet of what Ms. Spears’s life has been like under the conservatorship for the past 13 years. Mr. Vlasov said the re- lentless surveillance operation helped several people linked to the conservatorship — primarily her father, James P. Spears — con- trol nearly every aspect of her life. “It really reminded me of some- body that was in prison,” said Mr. Vlasov, 30. “And security was put in a position to be the prison guards essentially.” In response to detailed ques- Security Firm Secretly Tracked and Recorded Spears for Years By LIZ DAY and SAMANTHA STARK Even Bedroom Is Said to Have Been Bugged Continued on Page A13 More than 64 percent of Americans ages 12 and older are fully vaccinated against Covid-19. But rates are well below that in many parts of the country, as the government prepares to roll out booster shots for some. Vaccinations Still Lag in Many U.S. Counties IOWA KAN. KY. ALA. ALASKA ARIZ. ARK. CALIF. COLO. CONN. FLA. GA. HAWAII IDAHO ILL. IND. TEXAS UTAH VT. LA. MAINE MD. MASS. MICH. MINN. MISS. MO. MONT. NEB. N.H. N.J. N.M. N.Y. N.C. N.D. OHIO OKLA. ORE. PA. R.I. S.C. S.D. TENN. VA. WASH. W.VA. WIS. WYO. DEL. NEV. No C.D.C. data available for Hawaii, Texas and some counties. Three other states were excluded because more than a quarter of data is missing. Data from Texas and Colorado excludes shots given by most federal agencies. Data is not available for residents of Idaho under 18. D.C. INSUFFICIENT OR NO DATA PERCENT FULLY VACCINATED (AGES 12+) 75% 60 45 30 Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Texas Department of State Health Services; Colorado Department of Public Health & Environment; Massachusetts Department of Public Health; U.S. Census Bureau THE NEW YORK TIMES WASHINGTON — The Justice Department reached an agree- ment on Friday clearing the way for a senior executive of Huawei Technologies, the Chinese tele- communications giant, to return to China after admitting some wrongdoing in a sanctions vio- lation case, removing one major irritant between the two super- powers. Within hours, China reciprocat- ed, releasing two Canadians whom it had held since shortly af- ter the executive, Meng Wanzhou, was detained, and who had ap- peared to be jailed as hostages to the resolution of Ms. Meng’s case. The resolution of the criminal charges against Ms. Meng, the daughter of Huawei’s founder, came in the midst of a downward spiral in military, technological and trade competition between Washington and Beijing. In China, Ms. Meng is consid- ered a member of the new Chinese royalty — technology executives who have used their power to ex- pand China’s influence across the globe. In Washington, she became a symbol of the Cold War-like at- mosphere in relations between Beijing and Washington — and the near simultaneous releases also had echoes of that era. The end of the three-year-old case suggested that the Biden ad- ministration and the government HUAWEI OFFICIAL IS FREED IN DEAL Breakthrough That Eases Tensions With China This article is by David E. Sanger, Dan Bilefsky and Katie Benner. Continued on Page A6 Late Edition VOL. CLXXI .... No. 59,192 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2021 Florida’s version of the Ameri- can dream, which holds that even people of relatively modest means can aspire to live near the water, depends on a few crucial compo- nents: sugar white beaches, soft ocean breezes and federal flood insurance that is heavily subsi- dized. But starting Oct. 1, communities in Florida and elsewhere around the country will see those subsi- dies begin to disappear in a na- tionwide experiment in trying to adapt to climate change: Forcing Americans to pay something closer to the real cost of their flood risk, which is rising as the planet warms. While the program also covers homes around the country, the pain will be most acutely felt in coastal communities. For the first time, the new rates will also take into account the size of a home, so that large houses by the ocean could see an especially big jump in rates. Federal officials say the goal is fairness — and also getting home- owners to understand the extent of the risk they face, and perhaps move to safer ground, reducing the human and financial toll of dis- asters. “Subsidized insurance has been critical for supporting coastal real estate markets,” said Benjamin Keys, a professor at the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School. Removing that subsidy, he said, is likely to affect where Americans build houses and how much people will pay for them. “It’s going to require a major re- think about coastal living.” The government’s new ap- proach threatens home values, perhaps nowhere as intensely as Florida, a state particularly ex- posed to rising seas and wors- ening hurricanes. In some parts of the state, the cost of flood insur- ance will eventually increase ten- fold, according to data obtained by The New York Times. For example, Jennifer Zales, a real estate agent who lives in Want to Live by the Water? You’ll Pay Even More. By CHRISTOPHER FLAVELLE Beachfront homes in Anna Maria, Fla., where residents face steep increases in flood insurance. EVE EDELHEIT FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES Continued on Page A15 Flood Insurance Rates Set to Rise Sharply as Subsidies Fade The Empire State Building, once a symbol of an urban way of working, faces emptying offices. PAGES B6-7 BUSINESS B1-8 102 Stories of Change An immersive art installation in Denver is an entertaining escape from reality that’s light on artistic meaning. PAGE C1 ARTS C1-7 Surreal Fun House Tensions with China and Pakistan are stretching a cash-starved military along the northern border, while the fall of Afghanistan to the Taliban has removed a potential ally. PAGE A4 INTERNATIONAL A4-9 India Juggles 2 Hostile Fronts Beijing has declared all cryptocurrency transactions illegal and banned cryptocurrency mining. PAGE B1 Crypto Crackdown in China China has already determined the outcome of an upcoming legislative election, but Beijing is pressuring oppo- sition parties to participate to lend the vote legitimacy. PAGE A6 Picking Winners in Hong Kong Officials in Rochester, N.Y., filed depart- mental charges against an officer who took part in arresting Daniel Prude, a Black man who died in custody. PAGE A19 Officer Faces Discipline The actor Jared Harris, now in the sci-fi epic “Foundation,” pays attention to the tiniest details of his characters. PAGE C1 Making Small Moments Count Bret Stephens PAGE A21 OPINION A20-21 Ingenious recipes that can help you whip up a delicious meal (not just sand- wiches!) in less than 30 minutes. THIS WEEKEND Fast and Flavorful Opposition to tax rate increases from a moderate Democrat has revived efforts in the Senate to help fund the budget bill with a levy on pollution. PAGE A14 Considering a Carbon Tax Restaurant hosts, the friendly greeters at the door, are encountering hostile and violent diners as they enforce health rules. PAGE A10 NATIONAL A10-19 In the Covid War’s Hot Seat The Americans took control at Whistling Straits by winning each of the opening day’s sessions for a 6-2 lead over the Europeans. PAGE B12 SPORTS B9-12 U.S. in Driver’s Seat at Ryder Today, mostly sunny, mild, light breezes, high 75. Tonight, clear to partly cloudy, low 62. Tomorrow, mostly sunny, breezy, low humidity, high 72. Weather map, Page C8. $3.00

Transcript of For Eligible Americans Booster Shot Programs States Rush ...

C M Y K Nxxx,2021-09-25,A,001,Bs-4C,E1

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PHOENIX — After months ofdelays and blistering criticism, areview of the 2020 election in Ari-zona’s largest county, ordered upand financed by Republicans, hasfailed to show that former Presi-dent Donald J. Trump wascheated of victory.

Instead, the report from thecompany Cyber Ninjas said itfound just the opposite: It tallied99 additional votes for PresidentBiden and 261 fewer votes for Mr.Trump in Maricopa County, thefast-growing region that includesPhoenix.

“Truth is truth and numbers arenumbers,” Karen Fann, the Re-publican Senate president whocommissioned the vote review,said as the findings werepresented to the State Senate onFriday.

Mr. Biden won Arizona byroughly 10,500 votes, making hisvictory of about 45,000 votes inMaricopa County crucial to hiswin. Under intense pressure from

A Maricopa County ballot.POOL PHOTO BY MATT YORK

Arizona ReviewConfirms BidenHad Most VotesThis article is by Jack Healy, Mi-

chael Wines and Nick Corasaniti.

Continued on Page A16

The spread of the Delta varianthas delayed office reopenings, dis-rupted the start of school and gen-erally dashed hopes for a return tonormal after Labor Day. But it hasnot pushed the U.S. economic re-covery into reverse.

Now that recovery faces a newtest: the removal of much of theaid that has helped keep house-holds and businesses afloat for thepast year and a half.

The Paycheck Protection Pro-gram, which distributed hundredsof billions of dollars in grants andloans to thousands of small busi-nesses, concluded last spring. Afederal eviction moratoriumended last month after the Su-preme Court blocked the Bidenadministration’s last-minute ef-fort to extend it. Most recently, anestimated 7.5 million people lostunemployment benefits whenprograms that expanded the sys-tem during the pandemic were al-lowed to lapse.

Next up: the Federal Reserve,which on Wednesday indicated itcould start pulling back its stimu-lus efforts as early as November.

The one-two punch of a re-surgent pandemic and waning aidhas led Wall Street forecasters,who were once rosy about theeconomy’s prospects this fall andwinter, to turn increasingly glum.Goldman Sachs said this monththat it expected third-quarter datato show a decline in consumerspending, the linchpin of the re-covery for the past year. Manyeconomists expect jobs numbersfor September to show a secondstraight month of anemic growth.

Yet economists also see impor-tant sources of strength that could

Delta OutbreakTests Economy,And It’s Passing

By BEN CASSELMAN

Continued on Page A11

AHEAD OF EXPERTS President Biden’s prediction of booster shots forall did not sit well with some scientists who advise him. PAGE A11

WASHINGTON — State healthofficials rushed on Friday to rollout campaigns to provide corona-virus booster shots for millions ofvulnerable people who got the Pfi-zer-BioNTech vaccine and to helpa confused public understand whoqualifies for the extra shots.

Among their challenges: mak-ing sure that recipients of theModerna and Johnson & Johnsonvaccines know that they are notyet eligible for boosters, reachingisolated elderly people and in-forming younger adults with med-ical conditions or jobs that placethem at higher risk that theymight be eligible under the broadfederal rules.

“Those of us overseeing vac-cine rollouts don’t have a clearidea of what to do,” said Dr. ClayMarsh, West Virginia’s Covid-19czar.

In his state, pharmacies sentstaff members into the largestnursing homes on Friday to ad-minister booster doses. In Ver-mont, health officials openedbooster shot appointments to peo-ple 80 and older on Friday, andsaid many other eligible peoplecould get them starting nextweek. But the state said it waswaiting for clarity from the Cen-ters for Disease Control and Pre-vention on which workers andmedical conditions would qualify.

In virus-battered North Dakota,officials struggling to make senseof the federal guidance delayed abroad booster rollout until nextweek, with a focus on reachingelderly residents and those inlong-term care settings, said KylieHall, an adviser to the state’sHealth Department.

Across the country, vaccineproviders are facing the realitythat many more people became el-igible for boosters after Dr. Ro-chelle P. Walensky, the C.D.C. di-rector, overruled her expert com-mittee early Friday. She said peo-ple at greater risk of exposure tothe virus “because of occupationalor institutional setting” wouldqualify, opening up boosters tomillions of people her advisorycommittee had left out.

People 65 and older and resi-dents of long-term care facilitiesand adults who have certain medi-cal conditions also qualify for theboosters.

After Dr. Walensky’s announce-ment, President Biden said 20 mil-lion people could get boosters im-mediately because they had got-ten their second Pfizer-BioNTechshot at least six months ago. In all,he said, 60 million people will beeligible for a Pfizer-BioNTechbooster over the coming months.

“If you got the Pfizer vaccine inJanuary, February, March of thisyear and you’re over 65 years of

States Rush to Roll OutBooster Shot Programs

For Eligible AmericansHealth Officials Trying to Make Sense of

Guidelines on Extra Pfizer Dose

This article is by Noah Weiland,Reed Abelson and Jan Hoffman.

Continued on Page A12

Britney Spears’s father and thesecurity firm he hired to protecther ran an intense surveillanceapparatus that monitored hercommunications and secretly cap-tured audio recordings from herbedroom, including her interac-tions and conversations with herboyfriend and children, accordingto a former employee of the secu-rity firm.

Alex Vlasov, the employee, sup-ported his claims with emails, textmessages and audio recordingshe was privy to in his nine years asan executive assistant and opera-tions and cybersecurity managerfor Black Box, the security firm.He came forward for a new docu-mentary by The New York Times,“Controlling Britney Spears,”which was released on Friday.

Recording conversations in aprivate place and mirroring textmessages without the consent ofboth parties can be a violation of

the law. It is unclear if the courtoverseeing Ms. Spears’s conser-vatorship was aware of or had ap-proved the surveillance.

Mr. Vlasov’s account, and histrove of materials, create the mostdetailed portrait yet of what Ms.Spears’s life has been like under

the conservatorship for the past13 years. Mr. Vlasov said the re-lentless surveillance operationhelped several people linked tothe conservatorship — primarilyher father, James P. Spears — con-trol nearly every aspect of her life.

“It really reminded me of some-body that was in prison,” said Mr.Vlasov, 30. “And security was putin a position to be the prisonguards essentially.”

In response to detailed ques-

Security Firm Secretly Tracked and Recorded Spears for YearsBy LIZ DAY

and SAMANTHA STARKEven Bedroom Is Said

to Have Been Bugged

Continued on Page A13

More than 64 percent of Americans ages 12 and older are fully vaccinated against Covid-19. But rates are wellbelow that in many parts of the country, as the government prepares to roll out booster shots for some.

Vaccinations Still Lag in Many U.S. Counties

IOWA

KAN.KY.

ALA.

ALASKA

ARIZ. ARK.

CALIF.

COLO.

CONN.

FLA.

GA.

HAWAII

IDAHO

ILL. IND.

TEXAS

UTAH

VT.

LA.

MAINE

MD.

MASS.

MICH.

MINN.

MISS.

MO.

MONT.

NEB.

N.H.

N.J.

N.M.

N.Y.

N.C.

N.D.

OHIO

OKLA.

ORE.

PA.

R.I.

S.C.

S.D.

TENN.

VA.

WASH.

W.VA.

WIS.WYO.

DEL.NEV.

No C.D.C. data available for Hawaii, Texas and some counties. Three other states were excluded because more than a quarter of data is missing. Data from Texas and Colorado excludes shots given by most federal agencies. Data is not available for residents of Idaho under 18.

D.C.

INSUFFICIENTOR NO DATA

PERCENT FULLY VACCINATED (AGES 12+)

75%604530

Sources: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Texas Department of State Health Services; Colorado Department of Public Health & Environment; Massachusetts Department of Public Health; U.S. Census Bureau

More than 64 percent of Americans ages 12 and older are fully vaccinated against Covid-19. But rates are well below that in many parts of the country, as the government prepares to roll out booster shots for some.

THE NEW YORK TIMES

WASHINGTON — The JusticeDepartment reached an agree-ment on Friday clearing the wayfor a senior executive of HuaweiTechnologies, the Chinese tele-communications giant, to returnto China after admitting somewrongdoing in a sanctions vio-lation case, removing one majorirritant between the two super-powers.

Within hours, China reciprocat-ed, releasing two Canadianswhom it had held since shortly af-ter the executive, Meng Wanzhou,was detained, and who had ap-peared to be jailed as hostages tothe resolution of Ms. Meng’s case.

The resolution of the criminalcharges against Ms. Meng, thedaughter of Huawei’s founder,came in the midst of a downwardspiral in military, technologicaland trade competition betweenWashington and Beijing.

In China, Ms. Meng is consid-ered a member of the new Chineseroyalty — technology executiveswho have used their power to ex-pand China’s influence across theglobe. In Washington, she becamea symbol of the Cold War-like at-mosphere in relations betweenBeijing and Washington — andthe near simultaneous releasesalso had echoes of that era.

The end of the three-year-oldcase suggested that the Biden ad-ministration and the government

HUAWEI OFFICIALIS FREED IN DEAL

Breakthrough That EasesTensions With China

This article is by David E. Sanger,Dan Bilefsky and Katie Benner.

Continued on Page A6

Late Edition

VOL. CLXXI . . . . No. 59,192 © 2021 The New York Times Company NEW YORK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 2021

Florida’s version of the Ameri-can dream, which holds that evenpeople of relatively modest meanscan aspire to live near the water,depends on a few crucial compo-nents: sugar white beaches, softocean breezes and federal floodinsurance that is heavily subsi-dized.

But starting Oct. 1, communitiesin Florida and elsewhere aroundthe country will see those subsi-dies begin to disappear in a na-tionwide experiment in trying toadapt to climate change: ForcingAmericans to pay somethingcloser to the real cost of their floodrisk, which is rising as the planetwarms.

While the program also covershomes around the country, the

pain will be most acutely felt incoastal communities. For the firsttime, the new rates will also takeinto account the size of a home, sothat large houses by the oceancould see an especially big jump inrates.

Federal officials say the goal isfairness — and also getting home-owners to understand the extentof the risk they face, and perhapsmove to safer ground, reducingthe human and financial toll of dis-asters.

“Subsidized insurance has been

critical for supporting coastal realestate markets,” said BenjaminKeys, a professor at the Univer-sity of Pennsylvania’s WhartonSchool. Removing that subsidy, hesaid, is likely to affect whereAmericans build houses and howmuch people will pay for them.“It’s going to require a major re-think about coastal living.”

The government’s new ap-proach threatens home values,perhaps nowhere as intensely asFlorida, a state particularly ex-posed to rising seas and wors-ening hurricanes. In some parts ofthe state, the cost of flood insur-ance will eventually increase ten-fold, according to data obtained byThe New York Times.

For example, Jennifer Zales, areal estate agent who lives in

Want to Live by the Water? You’ll Pay Even More.By CHRISTOPHER FLAVELLE

Beachfront homes in Anna Maria, Fla., where residents face steep increases in flood insurance.EVE EDELHEIT FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES

Continued on Page A15

Flood Insurance RatesSet to Rise Sharplyas Subsidies Fade

The Empire State Building, once asymbol of an urban way of working,faces emptying offices. PAGES B6-7

BUSINESS B1-8

102 Stories of ChangeAn immersive art installation in Denveris an entertaining escape from realitythat’s light on artistic meaning. PAGE C1

ARTS C1-7

Surreal Fun House

Tensions with China and Pakistan arestretching a cash-starved military alongthe northern border, while the fall ofAfghanistan to the Taliban has removeda potential ally. PAGE A4

INTERNATIONAL A4-9

India Juggles 2 Hostile Fronts

Beijing has declared all cryptocurrencytransactions illegal and bannedcryptocurrency mining. PAGE B1

Crypto Crackdown in China

China has already determined theoutcome of an upcoming legislativeelection, but Beijing is pressuring oppo-sition parties to participate to lend thevote legitimacy. PAGE A6

Picking Winners in Hong Kong

Officials in Rochester, N.Y., filed depart-mental charges against an officer whotook part in arresting Daniel Prude, aBlack man who died in custody. PAGE A19

Officer Faces Discipline

The actor Jared Harris, now in the sci-fiepic “Foundation,” pays attention to thetiniest details of his characters. PAGE C1

Making Small Moments Count

Bret Stephens PAGE A21

OPINION A20-21

Ingenious recipes that can help youwhip up a delicious meal (not just sand-wiches!) in less than 30 minutes.

THIS WEEKEND

Fast and FlavorfulOpposition to tax rate increases from amoderate Democrat has revived effortsin the Senate to help fund the budgetbill with a levy on pollution. PAGE A14

Considering a Carbon Tax

Restaurant hosts, the friendly greetersat the door, are encountering hostileand violent diners as they enforcehealth rules. PAGE A10

NATIONAL A10-19

In the Covid War’s Hot SeatThe Americans took control atWhistling Straits by winning each of theopening day’s sessions for a 6-2 leadover the Europeans. PAGE B12

SPORTS B9-12

U.S. in Driver’s Seat at Ryder

Today, mostly sunny, mild, lightbreezes, high 75. Tonight, clear topartly cloudy, low 62. Tomorrow,mostly sunny, breezy, low humidity,high 72. Weather map, Page C8.

$3.00