PLAINS, Ga. — President Joe Biden has ordered U.S. flags on federal government buildings and property will be lowered to half-staff and half-mast for five days in recognition of former first lady Rosalynn Carter, who died Sunday at age 96.

Biden’s order calls for flags to be lowered from Saturday through Nov. 29, the day Carter will be buried in Plains, Georgia, the hometown she shared with former President Jimmy Carter.

The order applies to flags at the White House, all other federal buildings and grounds, and all military and naval posts, including Navy vessels, in the U.S. and its territories, along with all U.S. diplomatic, military and naval outposts abroad.

Such orders are common when major federal government figures die, including first ladies. Presidential spouses, though, do not receive state funerals.

Rosalynn Carter will be honored with public events beginning Monday in Sumter County, Georgia, where she and the former president were born, wed and lived most of their lives. Jimmy Carter, who is 99, remains at home under hospice care.

A service for Rosalynn Carter will be held Tuesday in Atlanta, followed by a funeral next Wednesday at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains, where the Carter were members for more than 40 years after leaving Washington in 1981.

She will be buried on land near the home where she and the former president have lived since 1961, with the exception of four years in the Georgia Governor’s Mansion and four years in the White House.

It is not clear whether Biden will attend Rosalynn Carter’s Atlanta service.

Biden has said he plans to deliver the eulogy for former President Carter when the time comes.

Navy plane in bay: A large U.S. Navy plane remained in a Hawaii bay Tuesday, the morning after it overshot a runway and landed in the water, raising concern about environmental damage and questions over how the military would remove the aircraft.

All nine people aboard the P-8A were uninjured when the plane, flying in rainy weather, overshot the runway Monday at a Marine Corps base in Kaneohe Bay outside Honolulu.

Crews set up a temporary floating barrier to protect the environment, and an investigation is underway, Navy spokesperson Lt. Mohammad N. Issa said in an email Tuesday.

The P-8A is often used to hunt for submarines and for reconnaissance and intelligence gathering.

Walmart shooting: A gunman opened fire Monday night inside a Walmart in Ohio and wounded four people before killing himself — the second shooting in 24 hours to take place at a store operated by the retail giant.

The attack at the Walmart in Beavercreek, a suburb near Dayton, injured three women and a man.

Three of the victims remained in critical condition Tuesday while a fourth had injuries that were not life-threatening, police said in a statement.

Walmart said it was working with investigators to try to determine why the shooter opened fire. His name and a motive for the attack have not yet been released.

“We’re heartbroken by what’s happened at our Beavercreek, Ohio, store,” Walmart said in a statement.

Christopher Suffron told WHIO-TV in Dayton that he was shopping with his wife when they heard five or six shots ring out. “I turned around and told her to get behind me,” he said.

The shooting happened one day after two people were shot and killed Sunday night outside a Walmart in south Anchorage, Alaska. Police are still searching for a suspect in that case.

Both shootings came nearly a year after a Walmart supervisor in Chesapeake, Virginia, fatally shot six employees two days before Thanksgiving.

Homelessness in Maine: Maine’s largest city has turned down a proposal that would have allowed homeless encampments through winter and into April.

The Portland City Council rejected the proposal 6-3 Tuesday in the wake of hours of testimony.

The city has a large homeless population and its practice of clearing homeless encampments has drawn criticism from some advocates in the community.

A large camp outside Portland’s downtown was cleared earlier in the fall.

The City Council voted this fall to temporarily add 50 beds to a homeless services center on the outskirts of town. The city also opened the new service center in March after years of planning.

The opening of the 218-bed service center shifted some homeless services away from Portland’s downtown. Portland officials said in June that the city was sheltering about 1,200 people per night.