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Home Blog Page 608

Dec 08 – Dec 14, 2022 | Weather

  • Weather
Adversavvy
-
8 December, 2022
0
Dec 08 – Dec 14, 2022 | Weather

¡Que Onda Magazine!

El Líder del Clima.

Mantente informado.

Click on the map to view details or click here: QOHW1208 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Survivor – Eye Of The Tiger

  • Music
Adversavvy
-
8 December, 2022
0
Survivor – Eye Of The Tiger
Rising up, back on the street
Did my time, took my chances
Went the distance, now I’m back on my feet
Just a man and his will to survive
So many times it happens too fast
You change your passion for glory
Don’t lose your grip on the dreams of the past
You must fight just to keep them alive
It’s the eye of the tiger
It’s the thrill of the fight
Rising up to the challenge of our rival
And the last known survivor
Stalks his prey in the night
And he’s watching us all with the eye of the tiger
Face to face, out in the heat
Hanging tough, staying hungry
They stack the odds ’til we take to the street
For the kill with the skill to survive
It’s the eye of the tiger
It’s the thrill of the fight
Rising up to the challenge of our rival
And the last known survivor
Stalks his prey in the night
And he’s watching us all with the eye of the tiger
Rising up straight to the top
Had the guts, got the glory
Went the distance, now I’m not going to stop
Just a man and his will to survive
It’s the eye of the tiger
It’s the thrill of the fight
Rising up to the challenge of our rival
And the last known survivor
Stalks his prey in the night
And he’s watching us all with the eye of the tiger
The eye of the tiger
The eye of the tiger
The eye of the tiger
The eye of the tiger

 

LATINO cARTographies BUZZ

  • Houston
Adversavvy
-
8 December, 2022
0
LATINO cARTographies BUZZ

This winter season Latino cARTographies has the honor of being featured in the arts and culture section of Houstonia Magazine’s winter issue.

Check out the featured story by clicking the link below!

Solid Waste Management Department  Collection and Facility Schedule for Christmas Holiday and New Year’s Day

  • Houston
Adversavvy
-
1 December, 2022
0
Solid Waste Management Department  Collection and Facility Schedule for Christmas Holiday and New Year’s Day

The Solid Waste collection schedule will be modified in observance of the Christmas and New Year’s holidays. The curbside recycling schedule for Thursday, December 22nd, Friday, December 23rd, Thursday, December 29th, and Friday, December 30th will be follows as: follows:

Thursday, December 22 – Friday, December 23, 2022:
Residents will receive normal garbage, yard waste, and junk waste collections.
Curbside recycling will be serviced on your next scheduled collection day, which will be January 6th and 7th, 2023. All facilities, including Neighborhood Depositories, Westpark Recycling Center, Environmental Service Center, and the Reuse Warehouse will maintain normal operating hours.  All administrative offices will be closed on Friday, December 23, 2022.

Saturday, December 24 – Sunday, December 25, 2022:
All facilities, including Neighborhood Depositories, Westpark Recycling Center, Environmental Service Center, and the Reuse Warehouse will be closed.

Monday, December 26, 2022:
All collection services will resume normal operations.  All facilities including Neighborhood Depositories, Westpark Recycling Center, Environmental Service Center, Reuse Warehouse, and administrative offices will be closed.

Tuesday, December 27, 2022:
All collection services and facilities will resume normal operating hours.

Thursday, December 29 – Friday, December 30, 2022:
Residents will receive normal garbage, yard waste, and junk waste collections.
Curbside recycling will be serviced on your next scheduled collection day, which will be January 13th and 14th, 2023. All facilities, including Neighborhood Depositories, Westpark Recycling Center, Environmental Service Center, the Reuse Warehouse, and administrative offices will maintain normal operating hours.

Sunday, January 1 – Monday, January 2, 2023: (New Year’s Holiday)
CITY HOLIDAY: All Solid Waste facilities and offices are closed.

Tuesday, January 3, 2023:
All services resume. Monday’s garbage, recycling, yard waste, and 1stMonday and 1st Tuesday’s tree waste will be collected.  All facilities will be open.

Wednesday, January 4, 2023:
Tuesday’s garbage, recycling, yard waste, and 1st Wednesday’s tree waste will be collected.

Thursday, January 5, 2023:
Normal collection services resume.

For more information about SWMD and our services, visit us at www.houstonsolidwaste.org, “LIKE” us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/houstonsolidwaste, follow us on Twitter @HoustonTrash, download our app HTX Collects on Google Play or IOS Store to Never Miss an Update again!  or call 3-1-1, 713.837.0311 the City of Houston’s Customer Service Helpline.

About the City of Houston Solid Waste Management Department
The Solid Waste Management Department (SWMD) provides solid waste services to the citizens of Houston through the collection, disposal, and recycling of discarded material in a manner that is safe, efficient, environmentally sound, and cost-effective.

Dec 01 – Dec 07, 2022 | Weather

  • Weather
Adversavvy
-
1 December, 2022
0
Dec 01 – Dec 07, 2022 | Weather

¡Que Onda Magazine!

El Líder del Clima.

Mantente informado.

Click on the map to view details or click here: QOHW1201

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Keep the arts evergreen!

  • Entertainment
Adversavvy
-
1 December, 2022
0
Keep the arts evergreen!

Hundreds of individuals have joined Performing Arts Houston’s new membership program since it launched last April. In addition to benefits like ticket discounts, priority access, and donor-only invitations, our members make a difference in our community by supporting our arts and education programs. These programs connect the remarkable touring artists we present with our community, creating once-in-a-lifetime learning experiences.

We hope you will consider becoming a Performing Arts Houston member today to support these critical programs. Memberships start at just $25 annually.

Students from Aldine ISD attend a student matinee performance at Jones Hall

Renew your membership to support these programs!

Art teacher Neda Khan from Debakey High School participates in a workshop for teachers

Members make it possible!

Performing Arts Houston
22/23 Season Sponsors

BARC, BISSELL Pet Launch “Empty the Shelters – Holiday Hope” Campaign December 1-11

  • Houston
Adversavvy
-
1 December, 2022
0
BARC, BISSELL Pet Launch “Empty the Shelters – Holiday Hope” Campaign December 1-11

BARC, the City of Houston’s Animal Shelter and Adoption Center, and BISSELL Pet Foundation, a national animal welfare organization dedicated to ending pet homelessness, are bringing hope to the nation’s shelter pets this holiday season with the “Empty the Shelters – Holiday Hope” adoption event Dec. 1 – 11, 2022.

Thanks to BISSELL Pet Foundation’s sponsorship, BARC will be waiving adoption fees for all pets at our adoption center, located at 3300 Carr St. This event will be hosted in more than 275 shelters in 43 states, including BARC. All interested adopters can find more details about the current event online at www.HoustonBARC.com.

“BISSELL Pet Foundation is in constant communication with our shelter partners across the country and they are struggling with unprecedented increases in owner surrenders and longer stays for pets,” said Cathy Bissell, Founder of BISSELL Pet Foundation. “With so many great pets waiting in shelters, our ‘Empty the Shelters – Holiday Hope’ event is the perfect opportunity to save a life through adoption and create space to give another homeless pet a chance. If you can’t adopt, please consider fostering.”

To find your newest, furry family member, visit BARC’s Adoption Center at 3300 Carr St. from 12 – 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. Interested adopters can also visit http://www.houstontx.gov/barc/adopt_a_pet.html to see our adoptable pets online.

“We are thankful to once again work with the Bissell Pet Foundation to try to get as many animals as possible adopted into their forever homes. Everyday our enforcement officers work to get stray animals out of our neighborhoods and into the safety of a shelter, but campaigns like these are crucial to help find homes for our adoptable animals,” said Greg Damianoff, Director of BARC Animal Shelter & Adoptions. “We are grateful for this partnership that allows us to completely waive adoption prices for interested Houston adopters during our annual Home for the Holidays campaign.”

BISSELL Pet Foundation’s “Empty the Shelters” event is the largest funded adoption event in the country. This lifesaving event began in 2016 with a goal of encouraging more families to choose adoption. Nearly 160,000 pets have found loving homes since its inception. “Empty the Shelters” is BISSELL Pet Foundation’s largest program, partnering with 560 animal welfare organizations in 47 states and Canada to reduce adoption fees.

Pet adoption is a lifetime commitment, and not just for the holidays. BISSELL Pet Foundation and BARC urge families to do their research about the pet they are interested in adopting, as well as adoption requirements. For more information on adopting or donating to “Empty the Shelters” or BARC, visit www.bissellpetfoundation.org/empty-the-shelters and https://www.houstontx.gov/barc/get_involved.html.

The Houston Health Department observes World AIDS Day to remember lives lost

  • Health
  • Houston
Adversavvy
-
1 December, 2022
0
The Houston Health Department observes World AIDS Day to remember lives lost

Free testing offered at all department health centers
The Houston Health Department (HHD) joins the world on December 1 in remembering the millions of lives lost to AIDS. The department urges awareness, education, and testing to help prevent the spread of HIV in Houston communities.

People can find the department’s health center nearest to them or other free testing locations by calling 832-393-5010 or visiting HoustonHealth.org for more information.

For the past 34 years people gather in solidarity to commemorate World AIDS Day to remember people who have died or are still living with HIV.

Since the start of the epidemic over 36 million people have died of AIDS-related illnesses and close to 37 million people were living with HIV worldwide, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Although there have been many breakthroughs, researchers continue to look for a cure.

“World AIDS day helps us remember why prevention through testing is important in the fight against the disease,” said Marlene McNeese, deputy assistant director of the department’s Bureau of HIV/STD & Viral Hepatitis Prevention.  “It’s up to all of us to create awareness of free testing available to the public and how pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) can help slow the spread.”

HIV testing, according to the CDC, sharply decreased in health care and non-health care settings from 2019 to 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic began, prompting an urgent need to increase testing.

The decline in testing includes 49% of gay and bisexual men, 47% transgender people, 46% Hispanic and Latino people, and 44% among Black people.

More than 1,169 new HIV diagnoses and 117 HIV-related deaths in Houston and Harris County were reported to the department in 2021. As of 2020, over 28,200 people were living with HIV in the Houston and Harris County and nearly 1.5 million new cases were reported worldwide.

The CDC aims to reduce the number of new diagnoses through the End the HIV Epidemic in the United States by 2030 initiative.  The strategy includes diagnoses, treatment, and prevention in Harris County based on the number of new diagnoses.

HIV continues to disproportionately affect racial and ethnic groups including gay, bisexual, and other men who have sex with men.

The department offers PrEP, non-occupational post-exposure prophylaxis (nPEP) and free and confidential HIV and STI testing at all four of its health centers to help prevent and detect new diagnoses.

Lava is spilling toward a key Hawaiian highway, but the governor says it’s safe to visit the Big Island Holly Yan

  • International
Adversavvy
-
1 December, 2022
0
Lava is spilling toward a key Hawaiian highway, but the governor says it’s safe to visit the Big Island Holly Yan

The world’s largest active volcano is shooting fountains of lava more than 100 feet high and sending a river of molten rock down toward the main highway of Hawaii’s Big Island.

The leading edge of the lava flow gushing out of Mauna Loa is about 3.6 miles away from Saddle Road, also known as Daniel K. Inouye Highway, as of 9 a.m. local time, according to a US Geological Survey news release.

USGS officials said Wednesday it could take at least two days for lava flows to reach the road, which connects the east and west sides of the island. The advancing flows “are approaching a relatively flat area and will begin to slow down, spread out, and inflate,” the statement says.

Hawaii Gov. David Ige signed an emergency proclamation Tuesday to direct resources and aid response to Mauna Loa's eruption.
This aerial photo, taken on Monday, November 28, shows a line of fissure vents erupting on Hawaii's Mauna Loa volcano.
Spectators watch lava flow down the mountain near Hilo, on Tuesday, November 29.
A fissure erupts Tuesday on the Northeast Rift Zone of Mauna Loa.
The eruption began in Moku'āweoweo, the summit caldera of Mauna Loa, around 11:30 a.m. on Sunday, according to the Hawaii Volcano Observatory.
Fountains of lava as tall as 200 feet burst from Mauna Loa on Monday, the US Geological Survey said.
In this long-exposure photo, cars drive down Saddle Road on Monday as Mauna Loa erupts in the distance.
Mauna Loa’s eruption propelled lava up to 148 feet high, the geological survey tweeted. On Wednesday, the fountains were as high as 82 feet.

Just 21 miles away from Mauna Loa, another active volcano in Hawai’i Volcanoes National Park keeps erupting. While Mauna Loa erupted for the first time in 38 years this week, its neighbor Kilauea has been erupting since last year.

Despite the dual eruptions, Gov. David Ige said it’s still safe to visit the Big Island.

“We would encourage everyone who has plans to visit the island to continue,” Ige told CNN on Wednesday.

“It is completely safe. The eruption site is high up the mountain, and it’s in a relatively isolated location,” he said.

But distracted drivers gawking at the lava flows could cause problems, Ige said.

“We are concerned because visitors and residents are stopping along the highway, and sometimes drivers are not paying attention fully,” he said.

“So we are concerned about traffic control on the highway.”

Parking along the road is prohibited between mile markers 16 to 31, and any vehicles left there could be towed.

If the highway is closed, commuters won’t have any pleasant options.

Emmanuel Carrasco Escalante, a landscape worker, said he would then have to decide between the northside or southside coastal roadways to get from Hilo to Kona.

“It’s a hassle to drive all the way around the island,” he told. “If the road closes, that would add almost two hours, more gas, and more miles so hopefully it (lava) doesn’t cross that road.”

Carrasco Escalante said he usually leaves for work at 3:30 a.m. to arrive at 5 a.m. but is worried rerouting even then will take him into traffic jams.

The state’s emergency management agency tweeted there are no evacuation orders in place and if it becomes necessary to close the highway, there will be time to alert the public in advance.

‘The concern is about dangerous gases’

While officials have said there’s no imminent threat to the property, a spate of potential health hazards could linger in the air.

Volcanic gas, fine ash, and Pele’s Hair (strands of volcanic glass) could be carried downwind, the geological survey said. A field team has found Pele’s hairs across older lava flows, the agency said Wednesday, adding: “Hairs deposited many km (mi) from active vents by the windblown eruption plume.”

State health officials have also warned about the possibility of vog, or volcanic smog.

The Hawaii health department warned residents and visitors about “vog conditions, ash in the air, and levels of sulfur dioxide to increase and fluctuate in various areas of the state.”

Children, the elderly, and those with respiratory conditions should reduce outdoor activities that cause heavy breathing and reduce exposure by staying indoors and closing windows and doors if vog conditions develop, the health department said.

The governor acknowledged the potential for air hazards and said officials are tracking air quality monitors across the island.

“The concern is about dangerous gases from the fissures. And the most dangerous is sulfur dioxide,” Ige said Wednesday. “Observing the volcano should occur at a distance. It’s not safe to get up close.”

While evacuation orders have not been issued, Ige said he signed an emergency proclamation as a “proactive” measure.

The proclamation “would make available all of the emergency responders, should it be necessary to activate the National Guard, to help with control and keeping people away from the volcano,” Ige said. “Or should evacuations be necessary, that would just allow us to act quickly and promptly?”

Mauna Loa eruptions can be “very dynamic”

At 13,681 feet above sea level, Mauna Loa is the world’s largest active volcano.

“Based on past events, the early stages of a Mauna Loa rift zone eruption can be very dynamic, and the location and advance of lava flows can change rapidly,” the geological survey said earlier this week.

The eruption and lava flow have also cut off power and impeded access to a critical climate tool used to maintain the so-called “Keeling Curve,” which is the authoritative measurement of atmospheric carbon dioxide and vital scientific evidence for the climate crisis.

The Keeling Curve graph comprises daily carbon dioxide concentration measurements taken at Mauna Loa since 1958.

“It’s a big deal,” said Ralph Keeling, a geoscientist at the University of California in San Diego’s Scripps Institution of Oceanography.

“This is the central record of the present understanding of the climate problem.”

Source: cnn

House votes to avert looming rail worker strike, impose deal on unions

  • Politics
Adversavvy
-
1 December, 2022
0
House votes to avert looming rail worker strike, impose deal on unions

The U.S. House moved urgently to head off the looming nationwide rail strike on Wednesday, passing a bill that would bind companies and workers to a proposed settlement that was reached in September but rejected by some of the 12 unions involved.

The measure passed by a vote of 290-137 and now heads to the Senate. If approved there, it will be quickly signed by President Joe Biden, who requested the action.

Biden on Monday asked Congress to intervene and avert the rail stoppage that could strike a devastating blow to the nation’s fragile economy by disrupting the transportation of fuel, food and other critical goods. Business groups including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the American Farm Bureau Federation warned that halting rail service would cause a $2 billion per day hit to the economy.

The bill would impose a compromise labor agreement brokered by the Biden administration that was ultimately voted down by four of the 12 unions representing more than 100,000 employees at large freight rail carriers. The unions have threatened to strike if an agreement can’t be reached before a Dec. 9 deadline.

Lawmakers from both parties expressed reservations about overriding the negotiations. And the intervention was particularly difficult for Democratic lawmakers who have traditionally sought to align themselves with the politically powerful labor unions that criticized Biden’s move to intervene in the contract dispute and block a strike.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi responded to that concern by adding a second vote Wednesday that would add seven days of paid sick leave per year for rail workers covered under the agreement. However, it will take effect only if the Senate goes along and passes both measures.

The call for more paid sick leave was a major sticking point in the talks. The railroads say the unions have agreed in negotiations over the decades to forgo paid sick time in favor of higher wages and strong short-term disability benefits.

The head of the Association of American Railroads trade group said Tuesday that railroads would consider adding paid sick time in the future, but said that change should wait for a new round of negotiations instead of being added now, near the end of three years of the contract talks.

The unions maintain that railroads can easily afford to add paid sick time at a time when they are recording record profits. Several of the big railroads involved in these contract talks reported more than $1 billion in profit in the third quarter.

“Quite frankly, the fact that paid leave is not part of the final agreement between railroads and labor is, in my opinion, obscene,” said Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass. “It should be there and I hope it will be there at the end of this process.”

Republicans also voiced support for the measure to block the strike, but criticized the Biden administration for turning to Congress to “step in to fix the mess.”

“They’ve retreated in failure and they kicked this problem to Congress for us to decide,” said Rep. Sam Graves, R-Mo.

Republicans also criticized Pelosi’s decision to add the sick leave second bill to the mix. They said the Biden administration’s own special board of arbitrators recommended higher wages to compensate the unions for not including sick time in its recommendations.

“Why do we even have the system set up the way it is if Congress is going to come in and make changes to all of the recommendations?” Graves said.

Pelosi sought to position Democrats and the Biden administration as defenders of unions and slammed the rail companies, saying they’ve slashed jobs, increased working hours, and cut corners on safety. But she said Congress needed to intervene.

“Families wouldn’t be able to buy groceries or life-saving medications because it would be even more expensive and perishable goods would spoil before reaching shelves,” Pelosi said.

The compromise agreement that was supported by the railroads and a majority of the unions provides for 24 percent raises and $5,000 in bonuses retroactive to 2020 along with one additional paid leave day. The raises would be the biggest rail workers have received in more than four decades. Workers would have to pay a larger share of their health insurance costs, but their premiums would be capped at 15 percent of the total cost of the insurance plan. The agreement did not resolve workers’ concerns about schedules that make it hard to take a day off and the lack of more paid sick time.

The Biden administration issued a statement in support of Congress passing the bill that implements the most recent tentative agreement, stressing that it would provide improved healthcare benefits and a historic pay raise. But the statement was silent on the measure that would add seven sick days to the agreement.

“To be clear, it is the policy of the United States to encourage collective bargaining, and the administration is reluctant to override union ratification procedures and the views of those union members who voted against the agreement,” the White House said. “But in this case – where the societal and economic impacts of a shutdown would hurt millions of other working people and families – Congress must use its powers to resolve this impasse.”

On several past occasions, Congress has intervened in labor disputes by enacting legislation to delay or prohibit railway and airline strikes.

Source: pbs

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