Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Workshop. Hazard Mitigation Grants. Next location Atlanta, Georgia

     Are hazard mitigation grants available in your state, county, and community?

     Better to plan to reduce the effects of the hazards in your community (mitigation),            before they occur.  Plan for the resiliency and sustainability of your community. 

     BEMA

05/11/2015 08:34 AM EDT

ATLANTA—The Georgia Emergency Management Agency/Homeland Security and the Federal Emergency Management Agency will hold one workshop on June 10, 2015 to explain a hazard mitigation program that funds projects that reduce or eliminate damage from future disasters.

A portion of the federal funding made available for disaster response and recovery from the February winter storm is allocated for the Hazard Mitigation Grant Program (HMGP). 

The program provides grants to state and local governments to implement long-term hazard mitigation projects.

Friday, May 8, 2015

Support and promote water usage and purification in your community.


WATER.  One of the most essential compounds needed for all life.

Support and promote water conservation, and purification in your community, and support others throughout the world in the importance of water.

Remember only 1-percent of the water in the world is available for human consumption.

BEMA

CDC. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. CDC 24/7: Saving Lives. Protecting People.
http://phil.cdc.gov/phil/details_linked.asp?pid=8229



PHIL Image 8229

This photograph depicts a young Ghanaian woman holding a pipe filter that she wears draped on a cord about her neck. Pipe filters are individual filtration devices, similar to a straw, which allow people to filter their water to avoid contracting Guinea worm disease (GWD) while traveling or working in the field. Persons become infected by drinking water containing copepods (water fleas) harboring the infective stage larvae of Dracunculus medinensis. Once inside the body, the stomach acid digests the water flea, but not the larvae, which find their way to the small intestine, where they penetrate the wall of the intestine and pass into the body cavity. 

During the next 10 - 14 months, the Guinea worms mature to a full size adult 60 - 100cm (2 - 3ft) long, and as wide as a cooked spaghetti noodle. Adult worms mate inside the abdomen. After which, the male dies and the female worm migrates to the site where she will emerge, usually from lower limbs.

Provide communities with safe sources of drinking water (such as from borehole or hand-dug wells), or have existing dysfunctional ones repaired. Because Guinea worm disease (GWD) can only be transmitted through drinking contaminated water, educating people to follow these simple control measures can completely prevent illness and eliminate transmission of the disease:
- Prevent persons with an open Guinea worm ulcer from entering ponds and wells used for drinking water.
- Always filter drinking water, using a household cloth filter or pipe filter, to remove the water fleas which harbor the infective Guinea worm larvae.
- Treat unsafe sources of drinking water with an approved larvicide, such as ABATE®, that kills water fleas.
- Provide communities with safe sources of drinking water (such as from borehole or hand-dug wells), or have existing dysfunctional ones repaired.




RECOMMENDED READING LIST

Search This Blog

ARCHIVE List 2011 - Present