https://www.rd.usda.gov/contact-page/kentucky-contacts
Saturday, April 15, 2023
Seminar: Disaster Preparedness and Response April 21, 2023
Jackie Curnick, MDP
(she/her/hers)
Program Coordinator, Community
Engagement Core
The Environmental Health Sciences
Research Center
UI College of Public Health
public-health.uiowa.edu/ehsrc/
Over 18,000 cows die in Texas dairy farm blaze
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/over-18000-cows-die-texas-dairy-farm-blaze-2023-04-13/
April 13 (Reuters) - More than 18,000 cows died after an explosion and fire at
a family dairy farm in west Texas, marking the deadliest such barn blaze on
record in the United States.
Firefighters rescued one employee from the South Fork Dairy near Dimmitt on
Monday as flames raced through a building and into holding pens, according to
images and statements from the Castro County Sheriff's Office.
The cause of the fire was under investigation and it was not immediately
possible to contact members of the family who own the farm in one of Texas'
biggest milk production counties.
The blaze prompted calls from the Animal Welfare Institute (AWI), among the
oldest U.S. animal protection groups, for federal laws to prevent barn fires
which kill hundreds of thousands of farm animals each year.
There are no federal regulations protecting animals from the fires and only a
few states, Texas not among them, have adopted fire protection codes for such
buildings, according to an AWI statement.
The blaze was the most devastating U.S. barn fire involving cattle since the
AWI began tracking such incidents in 2013. Around 6.5 million farm animals have
died in such fires in the last decade, most of them poultry.
Reporting By Andrew Hay in Taos, New Mexico; Editing by Daniel Wallis
--
Rudy Arredondo
President/CEO/Founder
Latino Farmers & Ranchers International, Inc.
1231-B Good Hope Road, S. E.
The Last Poets - Understand what black is Are you uncomfortable? Why?
The Last Poets & Metropole Orkest50th Poetry International Festival Rotterdam, De Doelen, 13th June 2019
"Tell me something I don't know." Racial disparities are working against disaster recovery for people of color. Climate change could make it worse
Only 'comfortable' organizations interviewed.
|
https://www.cnn.com/2023/04/14/us/racial-disparities-disaster-recovery-iyw-rd/index.html Racial disparities
are working against disaster recovery for people of color. Climate change
could make it worse
By Lauren Lee, CNN
Updated 4:55 PM EDT, Fri April 14, 2023 (CNN) People of color in the US face heightened risks of harm
from climate-induced disasters. Now, non-profits are pushing to remedy that
disparity with more equitable approaches to disaster preparedness, response
and recovery.
“Until we really address the root issues of climate
injustice, we’re going to continue to see a disproportionate impact as it
relates to disasters in Black and historically excluded communities,” said
Abre’ Conner, Director of Environmental
and Climate Justice for the NAACP.
The unequal toll of climate disasters
Moreover, Black people are 40%
more likely than non-African-Americans to live in areas with the highest
projected increases in mortality rates due to changes in extreme
temperatures.
It’s a dire warning for the
future, based on an inequitable past.
Many marginalized people, Black
in particular, have faced socioeconomic factors that relegate them to living
in environmentally hazardous areas or substandard housing structures. So,
when a natural disaster hits, they are ill-equipped to withstand the impact.
That was the situation this
past March 24 when a severe tornado leveled
much of the Black-majority rural town of Rolling Fork, Mississippi, killing
26 people. Racial disparities existed in Rolling Fork for decades. Many
residents there were poor, had low access to information or internet service,
were priced out of insurance coverage, and lived in mobile homes that weren’t
retrofitted to withstand severe weather conditions. With the nearest tornado
shelter over 15 miles away, it set the perfect storm to leave people
displaced and scrambling for aid and assistance, which was very slow to
arrive.
READ
THE FULL ARTICLE AT: https://www.cnn.com/2023/04/14/us/racial-disparities-disaster-recovery-iyw-rd/index.html |
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Black Emergency Managers Association International
Washington, D.C.
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