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    Snow and ice removal from vehicles targeted in five states – Land Line Media - January 25, 2022 by Mr HomeBuilder

    In the early stages of legislative chambers across the nation getting back to work, legislation in multiple statehouses address concerns about snow and ice removal from cars and trucks.

    Rules covering concerns about accumulations on top of vehicles are already in place in states that include Alabama, Connecticut, Georgia, Iowa, Michigan, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Wisconsin.

    Supporters say a snow and ice rule makes enforcement easier. Others say it provides significant motivation to clean off a vehicle following a snow or ice storm.

    A bill nearing passage in the Delaware Legislature would require drivers to remove accumulated ice or snow before driving.

    The House Public Safety and Homeland Security Committee voted 5-2 on Tuesday, Jan. 18, to advance a bill to allow law enforcement to pull over vehicles for failure to remove ice or snow. Fines would be set from $25 to $75. Incidents that cause property damage or physical injury would result in penalties of $200 to $1,000 for motorists. Truck drivers would face fines of $500 to $1,500.

    The bill, SB64, would limit citations to affected vehicles to once per 24-hour period. Drivers would be exempt when accumulations occur while the vehicle is in operation.

    The bill can next be considered on the House floor. The Senate voted 18-2 last week to advance a nearly identical version of the bill.

    Sen. Bryan Townsend, D-Newark, told senators before the floor vote that people need to take the issue seriously.

    I would like this to be a proactive law. I would like people to take this seriously and clean off their ice or snow from their vehicles before moving, Townsend said.

    He added that drivers should not leave it up to enforcement to make sure vehicles are cleared of accumulations.

    We are trying to strike the right balance.

    In neighboring Pennsylvania, one bill would revise the states rule on the issue.

    State law allows police to ticket car and truck drivers for fines of $200 to $1,000 if the wintry precipitation causes serious injury or death.

    Sponsored by Sen. Lisa Boscola, D-Northampton, the bill is intended to be proactive on the issue of ice removal from vehicles.

    Specifically, SB114 would authorize law enforcement to issue tickets for failure to clear their vehicles of snow and ice. In addition to trucks, mass transit vehicles, buses and school buses would be covered by the rule.

    Enforcement would be limited to highways.

    Drivers would be required to make reasonable efforts to remove snow or ice from all parts of their vehicles within 24 hours of a weather event.

    Offenders would face a maximum fine of $1,500 if the snow or ice causes serious injury or death. The bill includes an additional protection allowing police to ticket drivers $50 for failure to clear snow or ice before driving.

    Truck operators would be excused if they are on their way to a facility to remove accumulated snow or ice. In addition, violations would not be issued if compliance would cause the trucker to violate any federal or state law or regulation regarding workplace safety, or if it would be a health or safety threat.

    Senators approved the bill last spring. SB114 awaits further consideration in the House.

    The Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association has concern about rules that let police pull over drivers whose vehicles were not cleared of snow or ice. They point out that facilities are not readily available to accommodate clearance mandates on trucks. Another problem is the practicality of rules that appear to require people to climb atop large vehicles, and do so in less-than desirable conditions.

    The accumulation of snow and ice on any vehicle has the potential to negatively impact highway safety, OOIDA Manager of Government Affairs Mike Matousek has said.However, when it comes to commercial motor vehicles, theres really no practical or safe way of removing it from the top of a trailer, especially during winter weather conditions.

    Speaking specifically about SB114, Matousek has said its far from a great bill, but the legislation does appear to address some of the safety issues that OOIDA and others have raised through the years.

    A Massachusetts House bill singles out trucks for removal of snow or ice from vehicles.

    H3518 would prohibit commercial vehicles from operating on roadways with any accumulation of snow or ice on the vehicle roof.

    Violators would face fines starting at $500. Offenses that result in injury or property damage could result in fines starting at $1,000.

    The bill is in the Joint Committee on Transportation.

    In Vermont, one House bill introduced this week would create fines for driving before clearing any snow or ice accumulation.

    H674 specifies clearance from any trailer or semi-trailer, to the extent needed to avoid a threat to persons or property caused by the dislodging of accumulated ice or snow or by obstruction of the operators view.

    Violators operating large trucks would face minimum $100 fines. Subsequent offenses could result in fines of at least $500. Motorists would face fines between $25 and $75.

    Operators would not be liable for snow or ice that accumulates on a vehicle while out on the road.

    The bill is in the House Transportation Committee.

    Another bill in Virginia would require the removal of accumulated snow or ice.

    Delegate Mike Mullin, D-Newport News, introduced a bill to let police pull over motorists and truck drivers for failing to clear their vehicles of snow and ice before hitting the road.

    Violators could face $100 fines.

    Drivers would be exempt from the requirement if precipitation accumulates while the vehicle is out on the road.

    HB1183 awaits assignment to committee in the House. LL

    Keith Goble, state legislative editor for Land Line Media, keeps track of many trends among statehouses across the U.S. Here are some recent articles by him.

    Read more from the original source:
    Snow and ice removal from vehicles targeted in five states - Land Line Media

    Efforts to restore a neglected Charlotte cemetery prove it’s neither gone nor forgotten – WFAE - January 25, 2022 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Imagine going to visit your loved ones final resting place and not knowing where to lay flowers. Imagine not feeling comfortable walking the grounds because of the large hidden roots you could easily trip on and the piles of trash scattered throughout the property. Imagine not being able to find your loved ones headstone because it had cracked and fallen over or was covered by debris.

    Thats what 76-year-old Joe Ford experiences when he goes to visit his fathers grave at Cedar Grove Cemetery in Charlotte, located on Hildebrand Street off of Beatties Ford Road. The best he can do is stand in the general area where he thinks his father, John Ford, was laid to rest in 1963 after he died of a heart attack.

    "Oh, it was a beautiful cemetery when he was buried here," Ford said. "But it would be very difficult for me to pick out the site, you know, unless we could find some type of marker."

    Theres easily spotted evidence of people using Cedar Grove as a dumping ground or even a place to stay. Empty beer bottles and shiny food wrappers litter the property. Toilet paper used is also present.

    Ford was a teenager when his father died. He wants to help any efforts to restore the property, but hes not sure who hed need to ask to get started.

    1 of 13 cedargrove mother.jpg

    Headstones like this one are easily stepped on or tripped over due to leaves and branches that are not routinely cleared.

    Sarah Delia/WFAE

    2 of 13 cedargrove fallenheadstone.jpg

    With no one to keep up with the grounds, fallen headstones remain this way for years.

    Sarah Delia/WFAE

    3 of 13 The Charlotte News_19 Apr 1982_3A (2).jpg

    Reporter Osker Spicer wrote about the confusion over ownership in 1982, even contacting Davidson's two daughters who denied ownership of the property.

    The Charlotte Observer

    4 of 13 cedargrove bishop.jpg

    Bishop Robert Blair Bruce was a prominent figure in the AME Zion Church.

    Sarah Delia/WFAE

    5 of 13 cedargrove headstone 2.jpg

    This headstone that simply reads "J J" is in the process of leaning and will eventually fall.

    Sarah Delia/WFAE

    6 of 13 cedargrove headstone1.jpg

    Many headstones have fallen during these many years of neglect.

    Sarah Delia/WFAE

    7 of 13 cedargrove headstone ivy5.jpg

    With no regular landscaping of the property, greenery has taken over.

    Sarah Delia/WFAE

    8 of 13 cedargrove headstone3.jpg

    Vines have slowly crept over headstones throughout the years.

    Sarah Delia/WFAE

    9 of 13 cedargrove trashbags.jpg

    Trash bags dumped amongst headstones.

    Sarah Delia/WFAE

    10 of 13 cedargrove john davidson.jpg

    The last known owner John Davidson, is buried near the entrance of the Cedar Grove.

    Sarah Delia/WFAE

    11 of 13 cedargrove headstone sunken4.jpg

    The ground is uneven throughout the property which has taken a toll on headstones and makes it difficult to walk safely.

    Sarah Delia/WFAE

    12 of 13 cedargrove couch.jpg

    Trash and furniture is regularly dumped on the grounds

    Sarah Delia/WFAE

    13 of 13 cedargrove leaves.jpg

    Leaves cover the ground of Cedar Grove hiding large roots and headstones.

    Sarah Delia/WFAE

    "The main thing is finding the owner, you know, and getting his permission," Ford said.

    The last known owner of Cedar Grove is buried near the front of the cemetery. Willie Griffin, the staff historian for the Levine Museum of the New South, stood near thetombstone recently. John Davidson, who was Black, bought the cemetery in 1955. He renamed it to Cedar Hill Cemetery, but the name apparently didnt stick, and in later years, people reverted to calling it Cedar Grove.

    Davidson operated a funeral home in Charlotte. He died in 1972.

    "People have voiced their concern about the state of the cemetery," Griffin said. "Each time, there may have been some major efforts to clean up, but each time it has fallen back to sort of dilapidated state that its in."

    And its a very sad state. Ivy wraps tentacle-like arms around headstones, eventually covering them or pulling them to the ground. One veterans headstone has partially sunk into the dirt and is tilted to the side. One flat rectangular memorial that simply reads MOTHER is covered by leaves and is easily stepped on.

    Griffin stood in front of one of the more elaborate and well-maintained headstones in the cemetery, belonging to Bishop Robert Blair Bruce, who was a high-ranking official in the AME Zion church, and according to reports was a presiding elder in Mecklenburg County.

    "African American history in the city it's often overlooked and it falls into a state where it is unnoticed and it's sort of everything grows up around it," Griffin said. "And we forget about the efforts that African Americans have made to try to build communities."

    When Davidson died, so did the care for the cemetery.

    Burials continued at Cedar Grove at least through the early 1990s. But its hard to say in the cemeterys current state to say how many people are buried there or when the last person was laid to rest. Every corner you turn, a family plot is discovered. Pull back a branch, theres another grave. Plus, when Davidson bought the cemetery in 1955, it was already functioning as one. Its unclear how many people were buried there when he bought the land.

    So who is responsible for the upkeep of this cemetery and why has it fallen into such disrepair? Its a question many journalists have tried to answer over the years.

    In 1982, a reporter named Osker Spicer of the Charlotte News tracked down Davidsons two daughters, who lived out of state. Spicer wrote he found documents that said the property had been turned over to the women, but both denied it. One hung up on him and the other said the city of Charlotte was responsible.

    According to Spicers article, the city at the time said it was not responsible for keeping private property clean.

    In 2022, that' what the city is still saying, although now with an asterisk attached to that sentiment. Theres been a clear shift in tone. A representative from the city told WFAE it is interested in restoring Cedar Grove cemetery and even committed to doing a survey to help define the cemeterys legal boundaries. But Cedar Grove remains a complicated oddity because it was privately owned. Both of Davidsons daughters have died, neither had known children, so there is no apparent heir.

    Melissa Timo, the historic cemetery specialist for the North Carolina Office of State Archeology, says places like Cedar Grove often fall through the cracks "because they were a private family cemetery on private property and the laws are built to cope with another entity assuming responsibility for that place at this time."

    Timo says there are state laws in place to protect such properties. But at the local level, details about what should be done are murky. One option she says is for the cemetery to evolve.

    "Just because it's a cemetery, it doesn't have to look like a specific thing," Timo said. "Those sort of more loose but still respectful ideas about what a cemetery could be can be less physically or financially taxing on people but still allow it to look like this isn't just an abandoned lot."

    For example, turning Cedar Grove into a small park that has historical signage about the people buried there. Making it a space not just for families to come and honor their loved ones but creating an opportunity for the public to learn about its history.

    But that often means neighborhood groups, schools or other service organizations donating a lot of time to organize regular cleanups.

    Kevin Donaldson, a graduate student at UNC Charlotte, says he's ready to do that work.

    "You can't help it when you come out here, when you visit and you see the decline that it's in, it's just sad," he said. "And it just makes you want to get out here on the weekends with your clippers and some trash bags and clean it up."

    Donaldson has been working withGriffin, and they've been uncovering the history of Cedar Grove and trying to preserve it.

    Step one is to take down the arch-nemesis of any cemetery overgrown trees. Donaldson says there are more than 90 trees that should be cleared, a process that is underway.

    "This is like a museum to me," Donaldson said. "Just because it's a cemetery doesn't mean that it doesn't hold just as much great history. The people who are buried here hold so much great history about the city of Charlotte that we will lose if this place continues to fall into decline."

    Donaldson is holding a cleanup Jan. 30 and says hes contacted community members about forming a board to oversee the upkeep of Cedar Grove. One option could be the formation of an association that works with the city. In the past when Cedar Grove has received media attention, theres been a public outcry and a clean-up here or there. The goal this time is to make sure the maintenance is ongoing.

    Donaldson also created a website called savecedargrove.org, where he hopes to connect with families who are searching for ways to preserve and restore the cemetery. Connecting with these families is key if Cedar Grove cemetery hopes to live on.

    Ford whose father was buried at Cedar Grove some 60 years ago, agrees.

    "Because my father was a great father, we were close," Ford said. "I sure would like to find out where his grave (is) so I can start visiting and bring flowers, and it would mean world to my family."

    And while it would be a way for everyone to see that although people interred at Cedar Grove Cemetery may be gone, theyre not forgotten.

    Special thanks to the Robinson-Spangler Carolina Room for archival access and help with fact-checking.

    Read more from the original source:
    Efforts to restore a neglected Charlotte cemetery prove it's neither gone nor forgotten - WFAE

    Port Of LA Teams Up With Dairy Industry To Address Supply Chain Disruptions – NBC Southern California - January 25, 2022 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The Port of Los Angeles announced the launch of a Dairy Exports Working Group to identify and address supply chain disruptions affecting dairy exports from the U.S.

    The group will include the port, the International Dairy Foods Association and container shipping company CMA CGM.

    American dairy exporters have been hard hit by supply chain challenges and trade policy that have made it difficult to get their goods to global markets,'' Port of Los Angeles Executive Director Gene Seroka said.

    I'm pleased to collaborate with our dairy industry partners and the CMA CGM Group to launch this working group and find solutions that will benefit not only the dairy industry but all American exporters. We look forward to others joining this important initiative.''

    Local news from across Southern California

    The group will explore how to aggregate and streamline U.S. dairy exports, work to increase rail availability in the inland areas of the United States to reach exporters, determine the viability of implementing a ``fast lane'' concept for vessels that depart full or have less empty cargo containers.

    U.S. dairy exports reached a near-record $6.4 billion in 2020 and continued to set a blazing pace in 2021 due to surging global demand, but the U.S. dairy industry could be exporting much more to destinations around the world if there was more reliability and predictability in the supply chain,'' said Michael Dykes, president and CEO of the International Dairy Foods

    Association.

    Our IDFA members are pleased to collaborate with the Port of Los Angeles and CMA CGM in this Dairy Exports Working Group on potential market-based solutions to clearing bottlenecks at our West Coast ports and land and rail systems. This type of collaboration is essential to avoid significant future disruptions to the U.S. dairy supply chain that will result if exports continue to languish.''

    Port officials said that supply chain disruptions in the U.S. are costing millions of dollars for the dairy industry and damaging their credibility abroad. Dairy exporters are sending their products by air more than ever before, which sometimes costs 20 times more than by boat.

    Read this article:
    Port Of LA Teams Up With Dairy Industry To Address Supply Chain Disruptions - NBC Southern California

    Rekindling connections in the small flame of a qulliq – High Country News - January 25, 2022 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The seasons of Ualaqiq is a column by Laureli Ivanoff, an Inupiaq writer and journalist, exploring the seasonality of living in direct relationship with the land, water, plants and animals in and around Ualaqiq (Unalakleet), on the west coast of whats now called Alaska.

    My sister-in-law, Yanni, says her grandma always had to sleep with a light on. Yanni once asked her why. Her grandma said that when she was growing up on Little Diomede, an island in the middle of the Bering Sea, there was always the light from a qulliq as she went to sleep. With only darkness at bedtime, the air felt suffocating.

    Thats the only story I know of someone who grew up with the light of a seal oil lamp. Maybe my gram, too, went to sleep with a qulliq when camping with her family in a white wall tent. But now, like most questions that spring up in adulthood, its too late to ask.

    I didnt see a qulliq until I was a senior in high school. I had flown to the big city, Anchorage, from Ualaqiq,orUnalakleet, the hardworking fishing and hunting town of just 750 people on the western Alaska coast, where I grew up and still live. To me, Ualaqiq is the center of the world. Its name, however, means southernmost: We are the southernmost Inupiaq community in Alaska, and were cradled by the river with the same name.

    In Anchorage, at the Alaska Federation of Natives Youth and Elders Conference, in a fancy downtown building, I was maybe 50 feet from the stage when the organizers lit a seal oil lamp. Maybe in ceremony. Probably in demonstration. I was annoyed that I couldnt really see what was happening. But I saw light, and it felt sacred. People next to me were talking, and I wanted to stop them. To shush them. So they could notice. Appreciate. Because for generations, the qulliq had been forgotten. Seeing seal oil fuel light and heat ignited something inside me; I didnt have words for it then, but in that moment I understood that goodness comes from reclamation. Now I understand that restoring what was lost or taken away not only strengthens my identity who I am as a Native woman it softens my heart in relationship with others. Its nourishing.

    Winter, Kivalina, Alaska.

    So this past summer, when I saw an Instagram post about a qulliq workshop, I immediately signed up. Soon after, our postmaster handed me a package containing a 3-by-4-inch block of soapstone, along with a flat rasp and a curved one.

    I laugh today, remembering how after more than a year and a half of takingCOVID precautions seriously and limiting my interaction with others, even the prospect of an online class made me nervous. But the anxiety completely left my body and kitchen the moment the workshop host, Kunaq, and the other students made their introductions. It felt good to be with other Inuk women who, though scattered throughout Alaska and the country, were eager to connect with a simple but long-hidden part of our culture.

    Kunaq shared a few examples of different materials used for constructing a qulliq. She showed a photo of a 28-inch qulliq made of stone taken from Unalakleet and now housed in storage at the Anchorage Museum. She also showed a crude, simple qulliq made from an aluminum smoked oyster can. She discussed the traditional wicks: moss, or cotton from cotton grass or cottonwood.

    Kunaq then asked a question that pulled at something deep and sad and hopeful inside me. When was the last time a qulliq was lit in your community?

    I had seen a tiny, old seal oil lamp my cousin was gifted from a friend that sat on his shelf. No longer a tool for light, but an artifact. And when I was little, I found Papas skin scraper in his bedroom. The spruce handle, carved with peaks and valleys, was customized to perfectly fit his grasp. He probably never knew the word ergonomic, but Inuk tool makers like him were masters of the concept. He still had skins to scrape and preferred his handmade tools for the job, but by then Papa and Gram had electricity and no need for a qulliq.

    On the final day of class, Kunaq taught us how to light our qulliit. Behind our house, surrounded by birch and black spruce, is a clearing of open tundra where we pick blueberries, cranberries and ayuu, or Labrador tea. That day, I gathered dry white caribou moss for the wick, and for the fuel I grabbed from our refrigerator a small mason jar of smooth white rendered fat from a black bear my brother harvested. Did my ancestors ever use bear fat? I plopped a few teaspoons of fat in the bowl of the lamp. Where is the last qulliq used by our family now sitting? I rubbed the lichen with my hands, feeling its dry scratchiness in my palms. I pressed lichen onto the lip, the highest part of the lamp, and lay more down its inside curve to connect the wick down to the fuel. What would my great-great-grandma have used for her wick? I dipped my fingers in the fat and dabbed, as if delicately icing the tippy-top of the wick. And in my kitchen, with a match, I lit my qulliq and watched the flame dance.

    You should light your qulliq, Aaka, my 3-year-old son, Henning, said to me. It was one of those rare calm winter days in Unalakleet. Henning had just come inside from playing in what my husband jokingly calls naluagmiu, or white mans snow fluffy flakes that had fallen straight down, a type we rarely see in this windy country. It was just about suppertime and already dark, and I agreed with my bossy toddler.

    I placed a small piece of paper towel into the seal oil lamp and spooned some bear fat into the soapstone vessel. Once the dull paper held a purposeful sheen, I struck a match and lit the qulliq. Henning watched the entire ritual. Though its not a daily thing, I do this often enough now that he takes it for granted. Like Dad getting firewood, or Aaka making tea with big drops of honey. And I love that. That unlike my experience, the lamp will always be in his memory.

    I left the lamp on our kitchen table, and for a moment we both watched the small flame dance along the rim. The light simultaneously ancient and new. Grounding and lifting. Giving strength from just a flicker of understanding of where we come from. And I noticed my face and belly soften and my back straighten. Then Henning padded back to the living room to play.

    For a Christmas gift, I sanded a qulliq for Yanni and my brother. My black leggings turned white from the fine dust that fell as I sanded the block of soapstone into a curved and graceful vessel. My butcher-block kitchen counter, the one I daily lose the battle to keep clean and uncluttered, was covered in dust, too. A piece of coarse purple sandpaper lay crumpled and softened. Used up. My sinuses felt heavy, but the air in my kitchen was buoyant and dancing.

    This will not just sit on a shelf, I thought, the life of the lamp emerging as I removed smaller and smaller bits to refine the shape. Finally, I rubbed bear fat into my hands like it was lotion. I cradled the piece of matte, light-gray stone in my hands and moved it around, feeling its slopes and valley, its slippery surface. Once the whole lamp had darkened, smooth and rich, the qulliq was complete. I placed it on our kitchen windowsill next to my own qulliq, ready to light.

    Laureli Ivanoff, Inupiaq writer and journalist, makes seal oil, dried fish and strong coffee in Unalakleet, Alaska.

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    More here:
    Rekindling connections in the small flame of a qulliq - High Country News

    Environmentalists angered by management of Rocky Hill – About Regional - January 25, 2022 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Heather West inspects damage from erosion near the Wetlands viewing platform. Photo: Friends and Residents of Goulburn Swamplands.

    An environmentalist has lashed out at the long-term management of Rocky Hill, one of Goulburns most valuable natural assets.

    In the latest setback following clearing to make way for houses, months of rain has washed out a scar on the hill, filled backyards and the Goulburn Wetlands below with mud and gravel, and likely killed fish and reptiles.

    One of the wetlands original driving forces, Rodney Falconer, a former Goulburn high school teacher and environmental consultant, says Rocky Hill is an important scenic backdrop for the city, easily seen and complementing Goulburns wonderful heritage architecture. Mr Falconer says the residential development will create yet another hillside of ticky-tacky houses.

    READ ALSO: I have one word for people complaining about noise at Wakefield Park Raceway: stop

    Heather West from the Friends and Residents of Goulburn Swamplands (FROGS) said land clearing on the hill, contrary to Mr Falconers recommendations years ago, sent mud flowing into May Street backyards. At the wetlands, gravel had washed over grassed areas, mud was dumped into the ponds, slopes were eroded and revegetation mulching work gutted.

    Mrs West said two of the dams the developers had since built on the cleared site had breached in the last downpour.

    Unfortunately, when it isnt raining, they pump out the dams and let the water flow down May Street into the stormwater drains and into the Wetland ponds, Mrs West said.

    The Goulburn Group, which initiated the wetlands project, says hundreds of tonnes of mud have destroyed paths and vegetation and caused significant pollution to the water, with the likely deaths of many fish, reptiles and other species.

    We package up the most-read About Regional stories of the past week and send direct to your inbox every Thursday afternoon. Subscribing is the easiest way to keep up, in one hit.

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    The Goulburn Group says the deluge was an environmental disaster waiting to happen given the indiscriminate clearing of trees and other vegetation on a steep hill.

    We are dismayed that, despite objections and warnings on multiple occasions, inadequate action was taken to prevent what has occurred, a spokesman said.

    A Goulburn Mulwaree Council spokesman said the developer, Lockenstrand Pty Ltd, has been fined twice for working outside consent guidelines and polluting water.

    A stop-work order was issued and the only work allowed were control and prevention measures.

    The spokesman said the developer was not allowed to pump silt water out of the dams during fine weather and needed to let sediment settle as they were only allowed to pump clean water out.

    May Street, Goulburn, after the recent storm. Photo: FROGS.

    Any dirty water that leaves the site is an offence and is considered a pollution incident, he said. Council is currently assessing our legal options in regard to further action against this developer on this matter.

    Region Media has sought comment from the developer.

    For several years, Mr Falconer has provided vegetation reports and recommendations for Rocky Hill. He cites author Jim Smiths Aborigines of the Goulburn district which records the Indigenous Gandangara who had a large corroboree ground, featuring large rocks on top of Rocky Hill where the memorial stands today. Below those rocks was a boys initiation ground.

    Pleas from author Mary Gilmore, who lived nearby, to leave the Aboriginal areas of cultural significance intact were ignored as the community built the war memorial.

    Large areas of the hill were wheelbarrowed up to make the war memorial and vegetation was stripped. The original eucalypt forest didnt grow back. Instead, Tasmanian and South Coast eucalypts spread from nearby street trees onto the northern edge.

    READ ALSO: Looking for a great local media job? Region Media is hiring in the Riverina

    At the southern edge of Rocky Hill stood ancient scribbly gum with a healthy under-storey in which mostly Grevillea arenaria grew, which protected insects and small birds. This area was part of a significant migration route for native animals from the South Coast to the tablelands. The southern edge could still harbour the Rosenberg monitor, a threatened goanna species.

    Yellow box woodlands, another threatened ecological community, grew at the bottom of the hill.

    Im not sure how that was let go, certainly the environmental protection laws didnt do it any favours, Mr Falconer said.

    He had also learned from land authorities water poured from rocks on the hillside long after periods of heavy rain.

    Any houses dug in there, disturbing the rock, could put them at risk and possible landslides and so on, he said.

    That whole central part of Rocky Hill was important, botanically diverse and had a lot of large old scribbly gum. It was in fairly good condition and a major asset to the town, but not viewed so by some of the older councillors in particular, he said, referring to the former Goulburn City Council.

    He said the council had failed then and still today to appreciate Rocky Hill as an environmental and aesthetic asset.

    The management of this site has not been studiously policed whatsoever, Mr Falconer said.

    Original Article published by John Thistleton on Riotact.

    Originally posted here:
    Environmentalists angered by management of Rocky Hill - About Regional

    Former Bucs Tony Dungy and Shaun King Lead the Army of Head-Scratchers Over the Bucs’ Fatal Blitz – Sportscasting - January 25, 2022 by Mr HomeBuilder

    There are so many ingredients that go into creating the final outcome of classic NFL games, leaving fans, media and former players and coaches alike stewing for a long, long time.

    Who came up with these silly overtime rules? Why did the Buffalo Bills kick the ball deep with 13 seconds left in regulation? Why did Mike Vrabel go for two in a 6-6 game in the second quarter?

    And as the Tampa Bay Buccaneers were frantically driving for the game-tying score with less than a minute to play in their Divisional Round game on Sunday, why did Los Angeles Rams coach Sean McVay throw Tampa Bay a lifeline by calling timeout just as the discombobulated Bucs were going to snap it on 4th-and-1?

    But all of those curious decisions are playing for second place after a wild weekend of four walk-off winners. Because when you thought youd seen all the head-scratching decisions in NFL games after the Rams timeout and the subsequent game-tying touchdown, Buccaneers head coach Bruce Arians and defensive coordinator Todd Bowles told the world, hold my headset.

    About the only way the Buccaneers could possibly lose in the final 40 seconds after Leonard Fournette tied it at 27-27 was to somehow allow someone like, oh, I dont know, the Triple Crown-winning receiver and league MVP candidate Cooper Kupp get behind the defense to set up a game-winning field goal.

    And sure enough, Bowles and Arians called for an all-out blitz they never needed to call, Kupp got open and the Rams are playing the San Francisco 49ers in the NFC Championship Game on Sunday.

    Within seconds of Kupps 44-yard reception, the second-guessers were out in full force. And they were led by two men that hit the Buccaneers awfully close to home.

    Tony Dungy knows a little something about coaching and how to call defensive plays. When he coached the Buccaneers in the late 1990s and early 2000s, his defense was one of the elite units in the NFL.

    In 1999, the last time the Buccaneers and Rams played each other in the playoffs, Dungy came within one of the worst officials calls in NFL history the Bert Emanuel catch ruled non-catch of derailing Kurt Warners Greatest Show on Turf in the NFC Championship Game.

    So, imagine what was going through Dungys mind when Kupp was suddenly wide open and the Rams had survived. Actually, you dont have to imagine. Dungy tweeted it pretty much immediately:

    Dungy was far from alone in asking that question. Literally three minutes after Dungys tweet, his former quarterback from that 1999 Championship Game, Shaun King, basically said the same thing.

    If anyone was hoping Arians was going to provide a decent answer to those questions after the game, they were sadly disappointed.

    On Saturday, Tennessee Titans coach Mike Vrabel could have hung quarterback Ryan Tannehill out to dry for his three crippling interceptions in the 19-16 loss to the Cincinnati Bengals, but he took the high road instead.

    Arians, on the other hand, has all the tact of a wrecking ball, and when asked what happened on the play, instead of acknowledging that they never should have called for a blitz in the first place, he threw his defense under the bus, blaming the failure on the plays execution.

    Some guys didnt blitz, Arians said. It was an all-out blitz. We should have gotten a ton of pressure.

    It should be noted that the original question to Arians was, How was Kupp able to get so open? Did you have a blitz on?

    That question was not answered, beyond affirming that a blitz was called. So instead of taking responsibility for what happened, Arians punted, then backed the bus over his players.

    It did appear there was a miscommunication on the field, and at least one player who should have blitzed instead dropped back into a no-mans land, leaving safety Antoine Winfield alone to cover Kupp alone.

    But that doesnt change the fact that calling an all-out blitz in a situation where you can only lose by getting beat on an all-out blitz was a colossal blunder. And it was made worse when Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford offered his take on the play.

    Even if everyone on the Buccaneers side of the ball got the message and carried out the blitz as called, the result was likely going to be the same. Thats because Stafford read the blitz from the get-go.

    I felt it after the snap, Stafford said after the game. Kind of recognized it was going to be an all-out pressure and was able to put it to a good spot. And Coop made agreat catch.

    Once Stafford recognized that a blitz was on, he immediately knew that Kupp was going to have single-coverage. In fact, the blitz turned Kupp from a decoy on the play into the main receiver, making the decision to blitz look even worse.

    Youre really never getting the ball, Stafford said of Kupps original role on the play, pre-snap. Youre just clearing out some area, working for some other routes. They decided to bring everybody and thats really the best option at that point.

    Best option for the Rams, that is.

    Stats courtesy ofPro Football Reference

    RELATED: Buccaneers LG Ali Marpet Hints at a Culture Collapse if Tom Brady Retires

    Follow this link:
    Former Bucs Tony Dungy and Shaun King Lead the Army of Head-Scratchers Over the Bucs' Fatal Blitz - Sportscasting

    Wilcox County Students recognized for work in the community – 41 NBC News - December 28, 2021 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The program is allowing juniors and seniors to go to school while learning skills to prepare them for a career.

    ABBEVILLE, Georgia(41NBC/WMGT) Students at Wilcox County High School are being prepared for the workforce through a program called Work-Based Learning.

    The program is allowing juniors and seniors to go to school while learning skills to prepare them for a career. There are currently 45 students in the program.

    Its a nationwide program and one of the things they encourage us to do is to try to promote our program by promoting our students, said Sharon Lavender. Each week a student is recognized.

    Lavender says many students say the program is helping them think ahead for their next steps after graduation.

    Jackson Chastain has been with the program for two years, and was recently recognized for his hard work at Ten Mile Creek Grading and Land Clearing.

    Construction now a days everybody needs help sadly, but whenever I got in there it just kind of stuck, I was good at it, I had potential and I was willing to learn, so I stuck with the company and really and truly they stuck with me providing opportunities for me to learn and its just been a good job for me.

    Chastain says he grew up surrounded by family who work in the construction industry. So when then the opportunity to work for his grandfathers company presented itself, he took it.

    You got some folks who will do what theyre supposed to and not do anything after that, most of the time what I try to do is go above and beyond that by Ill do the job but then Ill actively look for something else to do.

    Tim Conner, Assistant Principal of Wilcox High School says, Chastain is a hard worker.

    Hes also a very intelligent A plus student and hes one of our outstanding kids here at school.

    Wayne Bloodworth is the owner of the company and Chastains Grandfather. According to Bloodworth, Jackson has always loved construction from a young age.

    In the vehicle when he was younger he was grandson, until we got to the job, at the job site he was an employee, he did what the other employees did to learn the ropes, said Bloodworth.

    Chastain says his next step is to attend college to study Civil Engineering. He also plans on furthering his career in the company.

    Original post:
    Wilcox County Students recognized for work in the community - 41 NBC News

    Permits now required in Douglas County for riprapping, clearing and grading projects – Echo Press - December 28, 2021 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Requirements for a permit to install riprap and standards that limit the use to active shoreline erosion, along with ensuring the maintenance or restoration of natural shoreline vegetation will be more protective of those critical areas, said Dave Rush, Douglas County Land and Resource Management director.

    Rush explained the zoning ordinance changes to the Douglas County commissioners at the Tuesday, Dec. 21 regular board meeting before they approved the amendments to the ordinance.

    Rush said the Douglas County Planning Advisory Commission made a recommendation to adopt the amendments to address the issues related to land alteration adjacent to lakes and rivers, which can negatively impact water quality and habitat to important county water resources.

    All but one member of the Planning Advisory Commission voted to recommend the approval of all the changes at their Dec. 14 meeting. Jeff Oberg voted against it, but noted it was the changes to the riprap amendments he had issues with.

    Rush told county commissioners that riprap is important for stabilization but that the county needs to protect more than just the lakeshore edge.

    Public hearings on these issues were held on June 8 and Dec. 14 with little public comment, said Rush, adding that two township officials expressed support for the amendments.

    Through conversations and feedback from state agencies, including the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, along with analysis of shoreland activity in the county, are other reasons changes are being made.

    Rush said that the DNR has provided the county with a letter in support of the proposed changes.

    Riprap, according to Rush, should only be used in situations where active erosion is occurring and not because homeowners like the clean look of it.

    According to the amended ordinance, a shoreland alteration permit will be required within the shore impact zones and has to be done in accordance with applicable restrictions and standards for natural rock riprap where active erosion exists.

    Rush said the county is not trying to prevent riprap and that rock and vegetation together can help stabilization.

    We need to protect our resources that we have in our county, including our lakes, said Rush.

    For clearing, grading and drainage permits, Rush said the changes will help address drainage problems before a project is completed. He said it is best to have a plan in place before any issues arise.

    Land owners will have to apply for permits for these types of projects if the work is within 500 feet of protected waters, said Rush, and the work would disrupt more than 2,000 square feet of property.

    We are not trying to over-permit, he said. If someone is already getting a permit for their project, they would not have to apply for this permit, too. People just have to meet the requirements. We are not trying to generate revenue. We are just trying to get ahead of issues that could arise.

    Creation of a permit that requires a submission of detailed plans for clearing and grading will help Land and Resource Management staff ensure that lake water quality is protected and neighboring properties are not impacted by the construction with drainage issues, Rush told the commissioners.

    The last proposed change will remove all mention of pervious pavement systems to bring the ordinance into compliance with the DNRs 2018 notice, said Rush.

    The full amended ordinance can be found on the Douglas County website.

    Douglas County commissioners approved the following other actions:

    A letter of discontinuance of Prime Health medical plan, which will be effective as of Dec. 31, 2022.

    Donations in the amount of $250 for the Douglas County Sheriffs Honor Guard from the Alexandria Rotary Club and the Minnesota Sheriffs Association.

    An increase in civil process fees, which have not been raised in more than 15 years.

    A resolution accepting the states opioid settlement agreement with pharmaceutical companies. If approved by all entities involved, the State of Minnesota could receive an estimated $296 billion, which would then be distributed.

    The 2022 county ditch special assessments and loan adjustments.

    A bid to Tradesmen Construction to build a visitor center at Lake Brophy County Park. The $1.8 million project will be paid for by Douglas County ($930,746) with a matching grant from the DNR ($930,746).

    A resolution supporting a bike path along County Road 46. The resolution states that the county agrees to act as the sponsoring agency and that it is seeking Transportation Alternative Program funding. A resolution supporting maintenance of the bike path was also approved.

    A contract with Waterfront Restorations for manual removal of weeds on a 100-foot by 250-foot area at Lake Brophy County Park beach. The cost is $13,500 for three removals and does not include weed disposal costs. The board chose the manual removal option over chemical treatment removal. The chemical option would have cost the county $1,800 for two treatments.

    A donation from Lake Christina Church in the amount of $50 for Douglas County Social Services clients.

    Amendments to the Douglas County Abatement Policy, which has been in place since 1990. Verbiage has been added to include that if an abatement exceeds $10,000, the county board will give notice within 20 days to the school board and other municipalities where the property is located.

    Updates to the investment policy, which reflect the change in the county creating a separate finance department.

    Excerpt from:
    Permits now required in Douglas County for riprapping, clearing and grading projects - Echo Press

    What the Forest Remembers, by Jennifer Egan – The New Yorker - December 28, 2021 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Charlene, whom they call Charlie, is six. This morning she scrutinized Lou, wrinkling her sunburned nose, and asked, Where are you going?

    Short trip north, he said. Some fishing, a little duck hunting, maybe.

    You dont have a gun, Charlie said. She watched him evenly, her long tangled hair raking the light.

    Lou found himself avoiding her eyes. The others do, he said.

    His little boy, Rolph, clung to him at the door. Pale and dark-hairedChristines coloring, her iridescent eyes. Its the strangest thing when Lou holds his son, as if their flesh were starting to fuse, so that letting go of him feels like tearing. He has a guilty awareness of loving Rolph more than Charlie. Is that wrong? Dont all men feel that way about their sonsor, at least, those lucky enough to have sons? Poor Tim Breezely!

    There will be no fishing, no hunting. What Quinn divulged, that afternoon on Montgomery Street, as they drank and smoked their Parliaments and roared with laughter before driving their big cars home to their wives and kids, was that he knew of some bohemians who grew grass in the middle of a forest near Eureka. They welcomed visitors. We can go overnight on a weekend sometime, if you like, Quinn said.

    They did.

    How can I possibly know all this? I was only six, and stuck at home, despite my fervent wish to come alongI always wanted to go with my father, sensing early (or so it seems, looking back) that the only way to hold his attention was to stay in his presence. How can I presume to describe events that occurred in my absence in a forest that is now charred and exudes an odor like seared meat? How dare I invent across chasms of gender, age, and cultural context? Trust me, I would not dare. Every thought and twinge I record arises from concrete observation, although getting hold of that information was arguably more presumptuous than inventing it would have been. Pick your poisonif imagining isnt allowed, then we have to resort to gray grabs.

    I got lucky; all four mens memories are stored in the Collective Consciousness, at least in partsurprising, given their ages, and downright miraculous in my fathers case. He died in 2006, ten years before Mandalas Own Your Unconscious was released. So how could my father have used it? Well, remember: the genius of Mandalas founder, Bix Bouton, lay in refining, compressing, and mass-producing, as a luscious, irresistible product, technology that already existed in crude form. Memory externalization had been whispered about in psychology departments since the early two-thousands, with faculty speculating about its potential to revolutionize trauma therapy. Wouldnt it help you to know what really happened ? What youve repressed ? Why does my mind (for example) wander persistently to a family party my parents took me to in San Francisco around the time this story takes place? I remember scrambling with a bunch of kids around the roots of an old tree, then being alone in someones attic beside a white wicker chair. Again and again: scrambling with those children, then alone in an unfamiliar attic. Or not alone, because who took me there, and why? What was happening while I looked at that chair? Ive wondered many times whether knowing the answers to those questions would have allowed me to live my life with less pain and more joy. But by the time one of my fathers caregivers told us about a psychology professor at Pomona College who was uploading peoples consciousnesses for an experimental project, I was too wary to participate. A gain is also a loss when it comes to technologymy fathers imploding recording empire had taught me that much. But my father had little to lose; hed had five strokes and was expiring before our eyes. He wanted in.

    Rolph had been dead for years, and my other siblings were elsewhere. So it fell to me to greet the young professor, who wore red high-top sneakers, along with his two graduate students and a U-Haul full of equipment, early one morning at my fathers house. I parted the sparse remnants of my fathers surfer shag and fastened twelve electrodes to his head. Then he had to lie stillasleep, awake, it didnt matter and there wasnt much of a difference at that pointfor eleven hours. Id moved his hospital bed beside the pool so that he could hear his artificial waterfall. It seemed too intimate a process to let him undergo with strangers. I sat next to him for most of the time, holding his floppy hand while a wardrobe-size machine rumbled beside us. After eleven hours, the wardrobe contained a copy of my fathers consciousness in its entirety: every perception and sensation he had experienced, starting at the moment of his birth.

    Its a lot bigger than a skull, I remarked as one of the graduate students wheeled over a hand truck to take it away. My father still wore the electrodes.

    The brain is a miracle of compression, the professor said.

    I have no memory of that exchange, by the way. I saw and heard it only when I reviewed that day from my fathers point of view. Looking out through his eyes, I noticedor, rather, he noticedmy short, uninteresting haircut and the middle-aged gut I was already starting to acquire, and I heard him wonder (but hear isnt the right word; we dont hear our thoughts aloud, exactly), How did that pretty little girl end up looking so ordinary ?

    When Own Your Unconscious came out, in 2016, I was able to have the wardrobes contents copied into a luminous one-foot-square yellow Mandala Consciousness Cube. I chose yellow because it made me think of the sun, of my father swimming. Once his memories were in the Cube, I was finally able to view them. At first, the possibility of sharing them never crossed my mind; I didnt know it was possible. The Collective Consciousness wasnt a focus of early marketing for Mandala, whose slogans were Recover Your Memories and Know Your Knowledge. My fathers consciousness seemed like more than enoughoverwhelming, in factwhich may be why I began, with time, to crave other points of view. Sharing his was the price. As the legal custodian of my fathers consciousness, I authorized its anonymous release, in full, to the Collective. In exchange, Im able to use date and time, latitude and longitude, to search the anonymous memories of others who were present in those woods, on that day in 1965, without having to invent a thing.

    Let us return to the men scrambling behind or (in my fathers case) alongside Quinn Davies, their guide. The introduction to grass took place at the trailhead, where Quinn passed around a small pipe, refilling it several times. Most people didnt get high on their first exposure. (This was good old-fashioned pot, mind you, full of stems and seeds, long before the days of hydroponic sinsemilla.) Quinn wanted to get this first smoke out of the way, to prime his palsBen Hobart in particularfor getting well and truly wasted later on.

    A river flashes in and out of view far below, like a snake sliding among leaves. As the men climb, their stumbling and guffawing yield to huffing, wheezing, and struggle. All four smoke cigarettes, and none exercise the way we think of it now. Even Ben Hobart, one of those preternaturally fit guys who can eat anything, is breathing too hard for speech by the time they crest the hill and glimpse A-Frame, as the house is known. Tucked in a redwood clearing and built from the cleared redwood, A-Frame is the sort of whimsical structure that will become a clich of seventies California architecture. But, to these men, it looks like an apparition from a fairy tale: Is it real ? What kind of people live here ? Compounding the eeriness is Simon and Garfunkels Sound of Silence eking from hi-fi speakers facing outward on the redwood deck. A-Frames mastermind, Tor, has somehow managed to get electricity to a house in the middle of a forest, that is accessible only on foot.

    Hello, darkness, my old friend...

    A hush of awe engulfs the men as they approach. Lou falls back, letting Quinn lead the way into a soaring cathedral of space whose vast triangular windows reach all the way to its pointed ceiling. The scent of redwood is overpowering. Quinn introduces Tor, an austere eminence in his forties with long prematurely white hair. Tors old lady, Bari, is a warmer zaftig presence. An assortment of young people mill about the main room and deck, showing no interest in the new arrivals.

    This odd setup leaves our three newcomers unsure what to do with themselves. Lou, who cant tolerate feeling like a hanger-on, is abruptly angry with Quinn, who speaks quietly and privately with Tor. What the hell kind of greeting is this ? Nowadays, a man ill at ease in his surroundings will pull out his phone, request the Wi-Fi password, and rejoin a virtual sphere where his identity is instantly reaffirmed. Let us all take a moment to consider the isolation that was customary before these times arrived! The only possible escape for Lou and his friends involves retracing their steps through the forest without bread crumbs to guide them. So Lou paces around A-Frame in a way he cannot seem to help (though he feels its disruption), barking occasional questions at Tor, who sits aloft on a tall wooden chair that looks irritatingly thronelike: Nice place, Tor. What sort of work do you do? Mustve been hell getting pipes laid this far out.

    Read more from the original source:
    What the Forest Remembers, by Jennifer Egan - The New Yorker

    Advocates Want the EPA to Force Portland to Clean Up a Key Stretch of the Willamette River – Willamette Week - December 28, 2021 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Environmental and community groups have asked federal regulators to crack down on the city of Portland and the state of Oregon for allegedly dragging their feet on the cleanup of a prime piece of the citys waterfront.

    We are writing to formally request that the EPA initiate formal enforcement action, reads a Dec. 7 letter to the Environmental Protection Agency, signed by the Audubon Society of Portland, Willamette Riverkeeper, the Portland Harbor Community Advisory Group, and the Portland Harbor Community Coalition.

    WHERE:

    The site in question is riverbed land adjacent to city-owned Cathedral Park, which sprawls across nearly 22 Willamette riverfront acres on either side of the St. Johns Bridge in North Portland.

    It is part of the Superfund site in Portland Harbora swath of waterfront polluted by industrial chemicals.

    Much of the property within the Superfund site is privately owned. Cathedral Park is one of the few places the public can access the Willamette within Portland Harbor.

    The park includes a beach of sorts and a boat ramp.

    WHAT:

    The EPA named Portland Harbor a Superfund site in 2000, citing a century of industrial activity that left the river bottom and some adjacent uplands deeply contaminated. (The harbor comprises a nearly 10-mile stretch of the Willamette from Sauvie Island to the Broadway Bridge.)

    The Superfund designation meant those responsible for the contamination (about 150 different entities) would have to clean it up. The glacially paced cleanup process reached a critical point in January 2017, when the EPA issued a 3,012-page record of decision and ordered those responsible for 17 different project areas within Portland Harbor to submit designs for cleaning up their messes.

    The EPA gave the polluters, known as potentially responsible parties, two years to present designs.

    Bob Sallinger, conservation director for the Audubon Society of Portland, says EPA got 13 responses; three zones are orphaned because the responsible parties are defunct.

    There was only one area for which the responsible parties didnt submit a proposed design: Cathedral Park.

    WHO:

    Sallinger says his group and other interested parties met repeatedly with the city and state over the past two years to discuss what form the cleanup should take. But nothing happened.

    Theyve had two years since the deadline, Sallinger says. Thats long enough.

    Annie Von Burg, a manager at the citys Bureau of Environmental Services, which oversees the citys involvement in the Superfund process, says the city isnt to blame. Portland is eager to move forward with the cleanup process, she insists, but wants to make sure industrial polluters that operated on either side of Cathedral Park share in the cost.

    Over the years, there have been many companies that have had operations at these two neighboring sites that are known to have contributed to this contamination, Von Burg says. We do not believe the public should have to pick up the whole tab for companies that should step up and meet their responsibilities.

    Von Burg adds that the EPA has made sure that the process continues to move forward so the delay in submitting a design for the Cathedral Park wont impact the public.

    State officials provide a similar explanation.

    The state has done more than almost any other party to address its responsibilities for remedial design at the Portland Harbor Superfund Site, says Charles Boyle, a spokesman for Gov. Kate Brown. No responsible party stepped forward to perform design work at the Cathedral Park cleanup area.

    Sallinger doesnt buy those stances, calling them completely unacceptable.

    This is a public site, Sallinger says. The EPA process allows the city and the state to recover costs after the fact, if its determined somebody else is responsible.

    WHATS NEXT:

    Audubon and other groups now want the feds to force the public entities to act. One option would be for EPA to bring an enforcement action against the public entities. That could result in protracted litigation.

    Another option: EPA could do the Cathedral Park cleanup itself and then bill responsible parties. Sallinger says thats not ideal, however, because EPA has no incentive to do more than the bare minimum, while public agencies could do whats best for Portland in the long term. He prefers that the city and state simply submit a cleanup plan.

    This has already taken more than 20 years, Sallinger says. We want to see EPA step up and move things along.

    An EPA spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.

    Continued here:
    Advocates Want the EPA to Force Portland to Clean Up a Key Stretch of the Willamette River - Willamette Week

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