Tuesday, September 5, 2023
Caribbean Rum & Food Festival.. September Events. Authentic Caribbean Foundation. Bring us together Caribbean Style.
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Some call it rum, rhum, or ron |
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Boston, Massachusetts |
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Enjoy some of the
world’s most renowned Caribbean Rum, cocktails, and food at the annual
“Caribbean RUM & FOOD Festival” being held in Boston, September 16, 2023 |
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NEW LOCATION Hartford, Connecticut-Sep 23 |
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All proceeds benefiting our kids with disability learning program |
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Congratulations. Recent Black Fire Brigade Graduates. Chicago. September 2023
Become an EMT
Saturday, September 2, 2023
Water Insecurity: These five cities could be one natural disaster away from a catastrophic water crisis September 2, 2023
These five cities could be one natural disaster away from a catastrophic water crisis
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CNN — When
torrential rainfall in August 2022 pushed the Pearl River in Mississippi to
surge well beyond its banks, floodwaters spilled into the suburbs of Jackson
and led an already-hobbled water
treatment plant to fail. It
was the final stroke in what experts described as a yearslong issue in the
making, which eventually left tens of thousands of residents in the city
without clean drinking water for weeks. What happened in Jackson,
experts say, is a bellwether for what’s to come if America continues to kick
the can down the road in addressing its aging and crumbling water infrastructure.
The climate crisis threatens to make those issues even more pressing. When
sea levels rise, summers become hotter or heavy rains lead to more flooding,
the country’s water infrastructure – largely built last century and only
designed to last roughly 75 years –
will be more strained than ever, threatening a system vital to human life. At the rate our climate is changing, America’s
water infrastructure is not equipped to handle the challenges to come, said
Erik Olson, the senior strategic director for health and food with the
National Resources Defense Council. “America’s
water system relies on last century’s infrastructure that often can’t protect
our health from hazardous contaminants,” Olson told CNN. “And our outdated
system is completely unprepared for this century’s challenges of intense
heat, drought and flooding.” The
American Society of Civil Engineers gave America’s drinking water
infrastructure a C-minus in its
2021 report card. And climate change-fueled extreme weather disasters
promises a gauntlet of even tougher tests. The 2021 infrastructure legislation signed
by President Joe Biden includes about $30 billion for drinking water, and
the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act another
$550 million for water infrastructure. But experts say those figures are not
enough to make up for decades of disinvestment and mismanagement across the
country. In
Jackson alone, it could cost $1 billion to $2 billion to repair the water
system, and the water industry estimates that the total nationwide costs will
top $1 trillion. “Federal investments account for just a few percent of the
total needs,” Olson said. To
better understand the issue, CNN examined five cities or regions across the
country that show signs of vulnerability under a rapidly warming planet –
from coastal flooding in New York to saltwater intrusion in California’s
groundwater. Read
more at this location for the additional story highlights on the following five
major cities: https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/02/us/water-infrastructure-failure-us-cities-climate/index.html Buffalo, New York Prichard, Alabama St. Louis, Missouri Central Coast, California San Juan, Puerto Rico |
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bEMA International
Washington, D.C. 20020
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Cooperation, Collaboration,
Communication, Coordination, Community engagement, and Partnering (C5&P)
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A 501 (c) 3 organization
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Water Wars: Avoiding North Africa’s First War for Water is the Subject of a New Better Satellite World Video from SSPI October 2022
As our planet grows warmer, water grows scarcer in parts of the world that are already dry. In 2018, Cape Town, South Africa came within a few weeks of having its water taps run dry. According to NASA, the entire Middle East entered a drought in 1998 that, in some places, is the worst in nine centuries.
One of those places is Egypt, a desert nation that depends for most of its water on a single source: the Nile River. Nine nations draw from that river on its long journey to the coast of Egypt, which is last in line before the river meets the sea. So, it was with grave concern that Egypt watched Ethiopia begin building a massive dam in 2011 to generate electricity.
Ursa Space Satellite Imagery Prevented an African Water War
Ursa Space Systems is a U.S.-based satellite intelligence company that provides business and government decision-makers access to on-demand analytic solutions. Through its radar satellite network and data fusion expertise, Ursa Space detects real-time changes in the physical world to expand transparency. The company’s subscription and custom services enable clients to access satellite imagery and analytic results with no geographic, political, or weather-related limitations.Popular Posts
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O riginal writings from: Justice Initiative International https://justiceinitiativeinternational.wordpress.com/2017/09/24/visiting-saigon-...













