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  • Spot Fake Online Reviews

    Here are some warning signs that an online review is being left by a shill, or shills:

    The reviews:

    * Have zero caveats, and are full of empty adjectives and pure glowing praise with no downsides.
    * Are all left within a short period of time of each other.
    * Mainly tally off product features. (Real users talk more about perofrmance, reliability, and overall value).
    * Reviewers names are all variations of one another, i.e. happykat1234, happykat7593, happykat6687

    Online reviews are just another data point to use when researching a product, and they’re best when taken in aggregate. Skim a slew of them so that you get a general sense of the tone and to figure out if there’s a common complaint, or piece of praise, that keeps cropping up.

    What techniques do you use to spot fake online reviews? Leave your thoughts in the comments.

  • ‘Dirt! The Movie’ warns us to not become dirt poor

    By Barbara Kessler
    Green Right Now

    Oil is running out. Clean water sources are dwindling. Next thing you know the very ground beneath our feet will be in jeopardy.

    Get ready to worry. It is.

    Dirt! The Movie warns us to tread more lightly

    Dirt! The Movie warns us to tread more lightly

    Dirt! The Movie,  being released on DVD today,  tells a story that might seem remote to many who live their lives inside cities, walking on concrete, occupying buildings and eating food that appears in restaurants. It might even seem remote to the suburbanite, that cultivator of chemically sustained sod. But this movie will dust away any notion that dirt lacks value. Indeed, our survival depends not just on Earth’s water and atmosphere, but the soil that covers the planet – even in cities where we can’t always see it.

    That’s the simple, devastating truth: We need dirt to grow the food that keeps us alive.

    Journey with narrator Jamie Lee Curtis, and a host of experts from California, India, Kenya and Argentina, in this documentary from Docurama Films, and you will marvel at the bounties dirt provides. You’ll also get the story on we humans have abused this vital natural resource. (With occasional comic relief from cartoon characters representing the micro-life within the soil.)

    Just as modern civilizations have taken what they want from forests, rivers and oceans, only recently pausing to consider replenishing these sources, they have degraded the soil, the Earth’s living skin. Dirt!, inspired by William Bryant Logan’s acclaimed book “Dirt! The Ecstatic Skin of the Earth” shows us the many ways this destruction occurs – through deforestation that allows rains

    Bill Logan, author of Dirt: The Ecstatic Skin of the Earth

    Bill Logan, author of Dirt: The Ecstatic Skin of the Earth

    to wash away the dirt, overbuilding that creates freshwater runoff, farming with poisonous pesticides and vast monoculture crops bleed off the soil’s nutrients.

    The end is always the same –  rich, productive land is stripped away, and in its place is left a barren desert that cannot sustain life.

    Dirt! bears witness to this disaster, this desertification, that’s unfolding continuously, almost everywhere on the globe. The destruction seems inexorable, a train wreck that we’re powerless to affect.

    We see scenes of massive commercial agricultural operations, where even the most basic rules of sustainability, like rotating crops to preserve the soil, are ignored in favor of chemical solutions that make the dirt perform, until it’s spent. We see dried and cracked farmland in India, already lost to ill-conceived farming practices and now climate change. And we see mountaintops sheared off by gigantic machines, their timber and rich soil discarded.

    By the time we get to Los Angeles, where directors Bill Benenson and Gene Rosow show us how runoff from concrete environments wastes freshwater, we want to yell, STOP! And this is probably exactly where the filmmakers wanted to corner their audience, driving home the grim situation before letting us in on some hopeful developments, like the movement toward organic gardening. (Gardners’ alert: You’ll love this movie with its defense of natural growing techniques, profiles of organic CSA owners and words of wisdom from traditional farming experts.)

    But you don’t have to be a gardener to appreciate Dirt! If you like to eat, or just live, you’ll appreciate that someone is digging into the situation with dirt.

    Dirt!, which has played at several film festivals and was an official selection at the Sundance Film Festival, does drench us with bad news about our soil. But it also sows seeds of hope.

    Did you know, for instance that, LA could get half of the water it needs from rainfall, if it managed that rainfall correctly? Currently, most of the city’s natural water is lost to run off down streets and walled stream beds, forcing LA to buy water from distant places. That makes no sense right? And the implication is clear: With greener spaces, permeable concrete and more thoughtful water management, and even  down to enlisting residents to collect rainwater, there could be hope for LA’s water situation.

    You probably also didn’t realize that Ethiopia, properly cultivated, could feed all of Africa. Now that’s mind expanding: Africa feeding itself. We don’t even think this is possible, and yet, the soil and farming experts in Dirt!, explain that we can get that sort of sustenance from the ground, if we treat it with respect and help it to regenerate as nature intended.

    The land, the soil, just like our water reserves and the air we breathe, must be tended and protected, say the many experts who appear in this film, from sustainable agriculture guru Wes Jackson of The Land Institute in Kansas to Vandana Shiva, physicist and acclaimed eco-activist of India, whose group Navdanya advocates for a return to traditional farming.

    Conservationist Wangari Maathai

    Conservationist Wangari Maathai

    Our dirt, these experts say, must be rescued from those who would use and discard it, like Big Ag, without planning for its future. And it must be managed as a recognizable resource, not a byproduct or ancillary feature of the landscape, because it holds the roots of life.

    Speaking about companies that clear cut forests, harming soil as well as trees, African conservationist and Nobel Laureate Wangari Maathai laments:

    “They see timber. They see money. But they do not see the diversity of life.”

    Now you must see Dirt!

    (Dirt! The Movie is being sold online at the movie’s website, where you can also get information on community screenings.)

    Copyright © 2010 Green Right Now | Distributed by GRN Network

  • Streetcar to Broadway

    First Hill at a loss for new transportation

    Your story “Proposed streetcar headed to Broadway” [page one, April 5] refers to the project as a “consolation prize” to First Hill to compensate for the loss of its light-rail station. In reality, the prize goes to Capitol Hill, which will gain the most from a streetcar.

    The majority of First Hill residents and commuters who live and work west of Boren Avenue get a lump of coal in their stocking —the promise of more slow-moving buses on Madison Street and other routes that are already in gridlock.

    On the upside, First Hill residents will still benefit from all the great exercise they get, hiking up and down the hill to get downtown to Third Avenue in order to access regional transit.

    — Michael Gray, Seattle

    Spending on streetcar will slip to city and residents

    Why are we prepared to spend upwards of $120 million on a streetcar project when adding a few more buses could do the same for a lot less money? There is nothing to be gained with this hopelessly outdated concept of fixed-rail streetcars.

    Streetcars have to share the same street space with all the other traffic, stop at the same traffic lights and, being fixed to their rails, are unable to navigate around obstacles.

    After more than two years, the South Lake Union streetcar is way under-used, with the city and the county stuck paying for staggering losses. This Broadway streetcar project most likely will end up the same way, with the city having to pick up the losses.

    We should stop this Broadway project while there still is time. It is a gross misuse of public funds at a time when the city and the county are struggling to deal with huge deficits. There are plenty of other, more-pressing needs for our tax money, such as education, the homeless and above all, to reducing deficits.

    — Wolfgang Mack, Seattle

  • Feral cat control in Walla Walla and beyond

    To aid animal-control agencies, tax food and luxury products for pets

    The story “When cats stop multiplying like rabbits” [NWMonday, April 5] discussed the funding difficulties of free spay and neuter clinics. However, the plan proposed by Families and Dogs Against Fighting Breeds (FDAFB) to fund free spay and neuter clinics was not mentioned.

    The plan proposes a small tax on dog and cat food and a supertax on all canine and feline luxury products such as Halloween costumes and diamond-studded, pink Chihuahua collars. Throughout the nation, only a small percentage of pet owners license their dogs, creating perennial shortfalls in animal-control budgets.

    It is time state legislators started taxing the people creating the problem rather making non-pet owners pay for animal-control services. And please, fewer animals will be euthanized if there are free spay and neuter clinics.

    — Ellen Taft, Seattle

  • Interview with Jeff Speck, Co-author of “The Smart Growth Manual”


    Jeff Speck, AICP, CNU, LEED-AP, Honorary ASLA, is co-author of The Smart Growth Manual. He is also founder of the design consultancy Speck & Associates. Previously, he was the director of town planning at Duany Plater-Zyberk & Company (DPZ) and director of design at the National Endownment for the Arts. Speck is also co-author of Suburban Nation, The Rise of Sprawl and the Decline of the American Dream.

    What inspired you and your coauthors Andres Duany and Mike Lydon to write The Smart Growth Manual?  Does this represent an effort to define or even codify smart growth practices?

    Andres and I started working on this about 10 years ago and Mike joined us more recently to help us put it together. Unlike Suburban Nation, which was something I was inspired to do after hearing Andres speak, The Smart Growth Manual was Andres’ idea. He realized, and I certainly agreed, that it was a term that was getting a lot of play. In 2000, we determined (and Andres, who tends to be right, determined) that it was the term that was going to win and become the dominant term, as it has. 

    He said, and I agreed, there are so many different ideas, concepts, approaches, designs being associated with this term and no one’s doing a good job at truly codifying what constitutes smart growth. Furthermore, there were already thousands of pages about what smart growth is, but no one had tried to put it all together into a single easy-to-use resource. As we say in our introduction, the goal is not to be deep but to be broad, and provide a readable and useful way to fully define the term and to instruct people in how to practice smart growth, or to judge growth that purports to be smart.

    There are sections on nature corridors, parks, urban street canopies and streetscapes — work landscape architects do.  Are landscape architects a target audience for your manual?  How would you recommend they incorporate your recommendations into their projects?

    It became clear to me when I was the Director of Design at the NEA and oversaw the Mayor’s Institute on City Design, where we would bring together design professionals with mayors to solve mayor’s urban design challenges…it became clear to me very quickly that there’s no one profession that alone is determining the physical form of our cities. In fact, we would invite eight experts to each institute, including architects, starchitects (because there’s two different types of architects), planners, urban designers, landscape architects, preservationists, developers, transportation engineers, and economists to just about every session.

    Landscape architects are a big part of the audience, but really everyone who deals with the making and remaking of cities will hopefully find some use in the book. Landscape architects, like many professionals, have a name that says one thing, but they often do more than just that one thing. There are lots of landscape architects who are in effect planners or urban designers, but are accredited as landscape architects.

    There are aspects of the manual that pertain directly to landscape architecture in the strictest sense, but given that so many landscape architects effectively practice planning and urban design, there’s a lot more information that’ll be useful to people who call themselves landscape architects, but do more than just deal with the green stuff.

    UN-Habitat’s recent State of the Cities report discusses the rise of mega regions, municipal regions of more than 100 million people. The difference between regions and cities is fading with increased population growth. What does this mean for smart growth?

    It’s a real challenge in America because we do not govern ourselves at the scale at which we live. This is why at the NEA I worked with the E.P.A. to create the Governor’s Institute on Community Design, which deals directly with state leadership so that as a nation we can make the right decisions regarding regional policy-making and practices. Most Americans inhabit multiple jurisdictions. When I lived in Florida, I would wake up in Miami Beach, go to work in Miami, go to the gym in Coral Gables and then go back to Miami Beach and that’s a typical experience among Americans, who would all benefit from regional planning but often don’t because there’s no jurisdiction that truly embodies the region. 

     
    The Louisiana Speaks Regional Plan, a rare example of cross-jurisdictional planning.
    Credit: Calthorpe and Associates
     

    Very few governmental entities align with the metropolis and so regional planning has historically been the type of planning which has been practiced with the least skill or effectiveness. It’s also the most important scale of planning. So the book is like the Charter of New Urbanism in that it ranges from the scale of the region to the scale of the building in that order, and the first full section of the book includes regional principles and practices, and the entire second chapter lays out the steps for creating a regional plan for a metropolis. 

    The problem with so many new urbanism projects, many of which I’ve worked on and I’m very proud of, is that they exist within regions that are totally unplanned, and therefore don’t have impacts on transportation patterns and quality of life that they could have if a more regional approach was taken. I mean to say they don’t help as much as they could.

    The Smart Growth Manual encourages the development of different types of plans at a variety of scales.  At the regional level players are encouraged to map green areas, development priorities, districts, and corridors and integrate these with transportation, energy and water plans.  How can planners implement these complex intersecting plans yet still leave room for adaptation?  How can you plan for regional economic, environmental, and social diversity?

    In terms of allowing for adaptation and addressing the fear of planning too much: certainly, at the regional scale, we have no examples in America of planning too much. I think anyone who studies the subject with any seriousness would agree that one need have no fear of losing flexibility in our regional structures given regional planning is generally not practiced effectively in the U.S.  Secondly, what we’ve learned, and this is often the cry one hears from architects and landscape architects when dealing with issues of planning and coding, is this fear of loss of choice and loss of variety is exactly what happens in the absence of regulation. People think that in the absence of regulation every building is going to be a Frank Gehry masterpiece and every landscape a Laurie Olin garden when, in fact, what happens in the absence of regulation is the dreck of the auto zone. 

    We have a thoroughly established and extremely monolithic system that creates the same big box sprawlscape across the entire country whenever there’s an absence of regulation. Therefore, more planning at the regional scale could only do good.

     
    What happens in the absence of proper planning is the opposite of diversity.
    Credit: Google Earth
     

    In terms of diversity, again, it is precisely the absence of planning that causes diversity to disappear. What we see in conventional practice is a development community completely split into developers who only do multifamily housing and developers who only do single family housing — some developers seem to do one house over and over again. There are developers who only strip centers, developers who only do big boxes. There are vast areas of single use featuring no diversity at all and an enforced economic segregation between housing plots of different incomes. 

    One thing that proper neighborhood planning — as outlined in the new manual and also promoted by the new urbanists — does is insist on a full range of housing types and tenures within every neighborhood integrated with places to work, shop, learn and play. That is the sort of diversity that, due to the hegemony of the sprawl model, is utterly lacking in conventional development. That is, unless smart growth has had an influence.


    New Urbanist housing in Boston mixes subsidized and market-rate units.
    Credit: Goody Clancy
     

    A new EPA report concludes that smart growth is taking hold in many U.S. cities.  The report says “there has been a dramatic increase in the share of new construction built in central cities and older suburbs. In roughly half of the metropolitan areas examined, urban core communities dramatically increased their share of new residential building permits.”  In addition to new urban housing, what indicators do you look for as signs that smart growth is expanding?

    I’d say it’s less of an indicator than it is a cause, but the price the gas and the now never-ending escalation in fossil fuel prices will continue to be a major determinant in where people choose to live, simply for economic reasons. The old formula of drive-till-you-qualify, where people would move further and further away from the center city in order to get one more bathroom or a bigger garage, has proven to be a false promise. Now, many Americans are paying more for transportation than they do for housing. All that has been accomplished by these people in California’s Central Valley, who moved further and further out in order to get a bigger house, is that they’re now finding housing and transportation cumulatively to be too expensive. It’s these vast tracks of ex- urban houses that have been the hardest hit by repossessions in the current popped bubble. 

    We’re also approaching an era of peak oil. We don’t have to run out of oil, but just have to start demanding it at a greater volume than it’s available. As is discussed in many books like The Long Emergency, our economic story is going to completely change. Those people who are dependent on cars to live their lives will find themselves much more burdened by this new economy than those who live in places where walking and transit are a viable alternative. Secondarily, what you see happening is people making a lifestyle choice, or I would say a quality of life choice, to enjoy all the benefits that the city offers. 

    You also have a demographic shift where fewer and fewer households include parents with children. There’s this geographic shift among childless millennials, Gen Y and Gen X, but pre-family households, and then empty nesters, who have much more desire for the city, because cities almost universally have inferior school systems. Cities, of course, need to focus on schools first to broaden the demographic appeal. But what we’re seeing is the realization — and, perhaps, this is even a cultural shift — that city life has a lot of value. The kids in my generation grew up watching “The Brady Bunch” and “Happy Days” while kids in the current generation grew up watching “Seinfeld” and “Friends.” The model for what’s cool has shifted from the suburbs back to the city. 

    I do want to bring up the issues raised by Green Metropolis, a book I really enjoyed. What I find most interesting is that smart growth is the one sustainable option that you can choose that is not actually a sacrifice — it makes your life better — unlike all of the gizmo green gadgets that are being thrown our way. You can be a bit more sustainable if you have high fly ash drywall, bamboo flooring, a solar collector or hot water heater, or super-insulate your house. (By the way, all of which I have done.) But as David Owen says in his book, sustainability is not about stuff, it’s about systems. Houses and buildings are really not systems; neighborhoods and cities are systems.

    As far as I’m concerned, the changes we are making to individual buildings are like moving deck chairs on the Titanic. We can change them all we want but it’s only when we fundamentally begin to address the organizational structure of our communities that we can really have an impact. Just to elaborate slightly, you can change all the light bulbs in your house from incandescent to compact fluorescent, but if you can live with one less car because you live in a walkable urban environment — or even a well- organized, walkable suburban environment — that has 50 times the impact. It makes changing your light bulbs statistically insignificant. The real flaw in this sustainability discussion, as David Owen points out, is that it’s focused on, “What can I buy and add to what I’ve already got, to become more sustainable?”  When the real question is, “Where can I locate to be more sustainable?”


    The landscape of subsidized automotion.
    Credit: Steve Mouzon
     

    Smart growth asks people to make real changes that do impact the quality of their life, but in an almost universally positive way.  It’s a choice that a lot of Americans are making because they realize that it’s a better way to live. If the schools were decent, it would be a choice that many, many more people would make.

    In a recent study, the University of Maryland concludes that Maryland’s 10 year program of fighting sprawl has largely failed.  The Washington Post says this is because the smart growth “laws had no teeth to force local governments to comply and builders had no incentive to redevelop older neighborhoods.”  What do you see is the greatest obstacle to putting smart growth into practice in more places?

    Maryland and Governor Glendening were at the cutting edge of smart growth when no one else was even talking about it.  And so their programs were necessarily first steps forward. Also, their programs were necessarily limited in their impact because of the environment that they were working in. However, they were very important in showing people what sort of directions were necessary. I’m confident that when we look back 30 years from now, we’ll see how important that work was in starting a trend towards more effective practices nationaly. To that I would add that I am aware of a lot of programs in Maryland and Virginia that have had significant impacts. For example, there is Montgomery County’s affordable housing policy and the Piedmont Environmental Council’s farmland preservation efforts. A lot of policies in Maryland and in the D.C. region have preserved a lot of land and provided housing diversity that stemmed from the work done in Maryland government in the ’90s.

    But the big obstacle is really cheap gas. More to the point, and this is a much longer discussion, we as a nation do not allow market economics to function properly in the pricing of automotive transportation. If drivers were to truly pay the direct costs associated with the use of their roadways, gas would be closer to $10 a gallon. Driving is subsidized from a variety of sources, but principally through general tax revenue that pays for roads and the other costs associated with driving that are born not by drivers but society as a whole. If the price of driving caused drivers to pay the true cost of driving, we would see consumers and businesses start to make the right transportation choices.

    Your book offers some detailed recommendations at the neighborhood, site, and building levels.  For instance, in one section, you suggest street tree planting approaches. You write, “In less urban areas, trees should be located between the roadway and the sidewalk in a continuous planter from 5 to 15 feet wide.”  What kind of research went into these recommendations?  Also, what is the right balance between plugging into defined design templates and taking a flexible, adaptable design approach?


    The neighborhood model is the only alternative to sprawl that has been fully tested over time.
    Credit: Duany Plater-Zyberk & Company
     

    The research that went into this book was decades of studying existing places that work. What distinguishes smart growth as it is currently understood from a broad range of alternative solutions that may be sustainable — and, in fact, some of which may be more sustainable — is that it’s based on examples that work and have been demonstrated to work a thousand times over. This is a discussion that pertains to new urbanism as well as the smart growth movement, but more specifically to the focus on the traditionally organized neighborhood as the central building block to healthy growth. As we say in the book, there may be other new untested ideas that are more sustainable than the traditional neighborhood, but we can’t have confidence in their success in the same way that we can have confidence in this fundamental design approach that for millennia has proved itself to be sustainable.  It’s only in the past 50 years, with the demise of the neighborhood model and its replacement with the sprawl model, that we’ve become an unsustainable species. The research that supports the book is the work of hundreds of generations of successful sustainable neighborhoods. 


    The Transect defines a continuum from rural to urban environments and creates a foundation for smart-growth planning.
    Credit: Duany Plater-Zyberk & Company
     

    In terms of an adaptable, flexible approach, the tool that we use to allow appropriate flexibility, that your readers are probably familiar with, is the urban to rural transect. You’ll notice that question your question began with the phrase, “In less urban areas.” Every aspect of design in The Smart Growth Manual is modulated by a location’s position on the continuum from the most rural areas to the most urban areas. There is no one appropriate design solution for any design challenge, but rather one needs to properly understand the location of the site in that continuum before heading towards a design solution.  Many of the less successful projects of the last 50 years have been the outcome of a confusion between the urban and the rural. Most of the least successful parts of contemporary American cities resulted from the imposition of rural — but in more cases suburban — design templates on an urban environment. I think that good designers, who understand the distinction between the urban and suburban, and who are capable of building great buildings and landscapes within properly organized neighborhoods, will find the prescriptions of the Manual liberating, not constricting. The goal is to create more places where good design can actually matter.

  • Tragedy at Tesoro refinery

    Not enough funding for OSHA to adequately protect workers

    The recent accident at the Tesoro refinery in Anacortes provides us with a teachable moment about the role of government in providing for the life and safety of its citizens. [“Refinery tragedies all too common,” page one, April 4.]

    There are certainly technical reasons behind the cause of this accident, but one of our societal causes is the poor oversight provided by the Occupational Safe and Health Administration (OSHA), charged with protecting the workers in the plant.

    It is not that OSHA does not care or is staffed by incompetents. Quite simply, there are not enough tax dollars available to fund OSHA adequately. As a result, it is understaffed and the existing staff is often inadequately trained to accomplish timely, competent inspections and has been given little in the way of real teeth to enforce and fix the violations it does find. It is a sad state of affairs when agencies such as OSHA are unable to adequately protect society because society does not give them funds they needs to do their jobs well.

    If we want a society of low taxes and limited government, accidents such as the one at Tesoro and the deaths that result are what we must learn to live with.

    What a weird thing it is to see groups such as the tea party preach low taxes and limited government when it seems that the tea party is made up largely of people who are the workers or retirees from places such as the Tesoro refinery. They are the members of our society who are the most vulnerable to these kinds of accidents, yet are the ones marching in the street to have it that way.

    — Jeff Christensen, Kirkland

  • Young-adult coverage in health-care bill

    Coverage details still unclear

    The story “Parents ask about health bill, young adults” [News, April 2] raises more questions than it gives answers.

    It does point out that nobody knows what is in the overall bill. The politicians voting for it tout certain provisions in general terms implying that it is a done deal. For instance, “You can keep your children on your policy now until they are 26.” The article clearly shows that this may not be the case.

    Must they live at home or still attend college? Would this be automatic on a health-care policy provided by an employer? What constitutes a “dependent”? If they live far away rather than at home, would area coverage restrictions in their parents’ policy be applicable? Until all these questions can be answered, no one can say for certain.

    There are many more questions in other parts of the bill that require detail and definitions before any of us will know how it affects us. Do not count on general statements by politicians to tell you what is in it for you. The pudding is in the detail.

    — Wayne Jensen, Kirkland

  • L.A. City Council grills DWP executive, asks agency for help in budget crisis

    With the city’s financial solvency hanging in the balance, the Los Angeles City Council called on Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa on Tuesday to corral his appointees on the board of the city’s public utility and convince them to hand over $73.5 million in “surplus funds” that the city was counting on to balance its books.



    In a unanimous vote, council members demanded that the board of the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power “honor their commitment” to transfer the money by mid-April to help counter a $212 million shortfall.

      

    City officials are scrambling for a backup plan a day after the head of the utility, S. David Freeman, told council members in a letter that he was urging the DWP board to withhold the money because the agency has no surplus.

     

    His recommendation followed a dramatic standoff last week between the council and the DWP over planned electricity rate hikes that officials at the utility, along with outside consultants, said were critical to cover rising coal costs and renewable-energy contracts. Initially, Villaraigosa had pushed for rate hikes that would have ranged from 9% to 28%.

     

    Public outcry led council members to reject rate increases of that magnitude. They approved a more modest rate hike of 4.5% last week to help ensure the fiscal strength of the utility. But instead of agreeing  to the council’s more modest action last Wednesday, Villaraigosa’s appointees on the DWP board voted for a 5.7% increase over three months, which was rejected late that night by the council.



    During a testy exchange with council members Tuesday, Freeman said the failure to green-light an electricity rate increase had “decimated our financial future.” On Monday, one of the nation’s top bond rating agencies withdrew a “AA-" rating on two DWP bonds worth $720 million.

    Freeman said he understood that city officials need every “nickel that you can get,” but added that the utility’s board “has a responsibility for DWP not to get in a situation where we can’t borrow money and our bond rating goes down, down, down.

     

    “I think there is unanimity that we need a sizable increase to pay our bills and that hasn’t happened,” Freeman said. “So I don’t see how you can expect the department to declare a surplus when we have a deficit on our hands.”



    Council members, however, said the agency’s reversal on this year’s transfer from the utility’s Power Revenue Fund did not make sense. Several noted that when DWP officials promised the $73.5 million transfer as recently as March 1 — as part of a total transfer of $220 million this year — they never linked that move to a rate increase, which would have provided a modest amount of additional revenue.

     

    Members asked the mayor to work with the DWP board to find $73.5 million from within the utility’s $1 billion in cash assets.

     

    “The people of Los Angeles and the ratepayers deserve better, they deserve more honest analysis and they deserve this being depoliticized,” Council President Eric Garcetti said. “…Something fishy is going on here.”



    — Maeve Reston at Los Angeles City Hall

  • The Fourth will come with fireworks

    Chase should have pitched in

    I am not a purchaser of fireworks, nor do I own a flag or wear flag-related clothing or accessories. But I do enjoy the Fourth of July, particularly the fireworks. [“Donors, big and small, fired up to save Fourth,” page one, April 2.]

    I understand how hard it is in this economy to find a sponsor now that WaMu is no more. But that left me wondering something: The only business (or individuals, for that matter) that are doing well in this economy are the banks and the bankers.

    Further, Chase stepped into WaMu’s shoes pretty seamlessly and tried to convince the community that it was part of the community. Remember the ads about how they are the big small-town bank? Remember the billboards of silhouetted bicyclists being all Seattle-like?

    Chase got the monetary benefit of people giving it the benefit of the doubt, but yet, when it comes to the community aspect of WAMU, it shrugged and walked away.

    The WAMU philanthropy was felt by many organizations in Washington. That philanthropy and sense of community has gone straight into the pocket of Chase. Its executives’ lack of stepping up to the plate for the fireworks is just another example. They asked us to do them a favor and then did not return it.

    Perhaps Seattle residents should reconsider doing business with them —I know I am.

    — Jeremy Cairns, Seattle

    Still proud, Seattle?

    This is a response to the editorial “The show will go on” [Opinion, April 5].

    Are you proud, Seattle?

    If that money was not destined for the fireworks display, it could have been used to feed and shelter the homeless or for medical attention for those who could not afford it; or even to spay and neuter dogs and cats so that our shelters would be less full.

    It could have purchased books for schools or be sent as aid to earthquake victims in Haiti.

    But the money was not raised for any of these causes. The public outpouring of support was for something near and dear to the hearts of those who donated. They want a fireworks display.

    Are you still proud, Seattle?

    — David Orders, Edmonds

  • Target placing recycling stations in all stores

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Target has launched permanent community recycling stations in all 1,740 stores to kick-off a month-long celebration of the 40th anniversary of Earth Day. The celebration also includes the launch of an online eco-boutique where guests can find eco-friendly products and learn more about the company’s commitment to the environment, a month-long sweepstakes and a reusable bag giveaway.

    Target will place recycling stations in all of its stores.

    Target will place recycling stations in all of its stores.

    The new recycling stations, located at the front of each store, offer a convenient way to recycle aluminum, glass and plastic beverage containers, plastic bags, MP3 players, cell phones and ink cartridges. A full description of recyclables that are accepted is available online.

    “We know that eco-friendly living is top-of-mind for our guests, and the launch of store recycling stations allows us to continue to partner with them to curb unnecessary waste in our stores and our communities,” Shawn Gensch, vice president of brand marketing at Target, said in a statement. “Target is committed to the preservation of the environment and to giving our guests eco-friendly options that will help them live more sustainably.”

    Target is celebrating Earth Month with other activities, including:

    • Launching an online eco-boutique that features downloadable coupons and eco-minded brands with products such as non-toxic cleaners, energy-saving appliances and products made of recycled materials.
    • A month-long “Drive Home Green” sweepstakes featuring a grand prize of a 2010 Ford Fusion Hybrid. Guests can enter online for a chance to win or by sending a text message with the keyword “green” to the short code “Target” (827438).
    • Giving away with purchase, 1.5 million complimentary reusable shopping bags made from 100 percent post-consumer recycled PET bottles on Sunday, April 18, while supplies last.
    • Distributing an innovative newspaper circular that allows guests the option to use a portion of the April 18 circular as an envelope to mail their plastic shopping bags to TerraCycle. In return, guests will receive a $1 coupon towards the purchase of a Target reusable bag priced at $1.49 or more.
    • Continuing to encourage guests to use their reusable bags at checkout to receive a 5-cent discount off their total purchase per reusable bag.
  • 66-Year-Old Man Critical Missing

    Update





    Today, Mr. Rimmer was found in the area of Topanga in good condition.



    Los Angeles: 
    The family of David Rimmer and the Los Angeles Police Department are
    asking for the public’s assistance in locating Rimmer, who has been
    missing since yesterday evening.




    On April 2, 2010, at around 6 p.m., Rimmer was last seen in the area of
    Nordhoff Street and Tampa Avenue in Northridge.  Since that time, he
    has not returned home or has not been in contact with his family.  The
    Rimmer family is concerned about his mental state and fear for his
    safety.  Rimmer is a resident of Winnetka.


     


    Rimmer is described as a male White with gray hair and brown eyes.  He
    stands about 5 feet 10 inches tall, thin built, weighing approximately
    175 pounds.  He was last seen wearing a bright green shirt, gray
    sweatpants and brown shoes.  Rimmer is mentally ill and suffers from
    Dementia.




    *Photograph of Rimmer is available through Media Relations Section at 213-486-5910.




    Anyone with information regarding the whereabouts of Mr. Rimmer is
    urged to contact LAPD Topanga Division at 818-756-4800.  During
    non-business hours or on weekends, calls should be directed to 877-LAPD-24-7. Anyone wishing to remain anonymous should all
    rimestoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (800-222-8477). Tipsters may also
    contact Crimestoppers by texting to phone number 274637 (C-R-I-M-E-S on
    most keypads) with a cell phone.  All text messages should begin with
    the letters “LAPD.” Tipsters may also go to LAPDOnline.org, click on
    "webtips" and follow the prompts.


  • To be an American ally

    Real story behind the Falkland Islands

    The assertion that the Obama administration of “out-of-the-blue … called for Britain to negotiate with Argentina over the Falklands.” [“With friends like us …,” Opinion, April 3] is wrong.

    The entire conversation is documented in the transcript of the news conference with President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner of Argentina and U.S. Secretary Hilary Clinton.

    President de Kirchner suggested possible U.S. assistance in resolving the Falkland Islands sovereignty issue between Great Britain and Argentina. This was not to decide whether the Falkland Islands should be awarded to Great Britain or Argentina, but rather to permit compliance with U.N. resolutions to remedy the colonial status of those islands.

    Those U.N. resolutions pertained to allowing the Falkland Islands to decide its political status, which could be independence or some form of political alignment with another country. The same resolutions apply to three U.S. territories.

    This was all part of a long-standing U.N. requirement to decolonize the 16 remaining colonies in the world.

    President de Kirchner, responding to a question at this news conference, clearly stated the purpose was “to get both countries to … address these negotiations within the framework of the U.N. resolutions strictly.” She and her advisers “do not want to move away from that in any letter whatsoever, any comma, of what has been stated by dozens of U.N. resolutions and resolutions by its decolonization committee.”

    — Malcolm McPhee, Sequim

  • Mexicali beginning to return to normal after Sunday’s earthquake

    Businesses in downtown Mexicali were starting to reopen Tuesday as power was increasingly restored for the first time since Sunday’s 7.2 earthquake just south of here.

    A few people were camped out in tents in the city’s parks. But overall the city of a million plus appeared to slowly be returning to normal.

    Shopping centers and fast-food restaurants here were also reopening. The flow of people across the border continues but has been greatly reduced.

    “Mexicali’s been through a lot,” said Eloisa Ramirez, 37, who was shopping downtown. “We’ll get through this.”

    Meanwhile, across the border in Calexico, Calif., clean-up operations of the downtown area have been completed. But most buildings remain red-tagged.

     

    –Tony Perry in Mexicali  

  • Texas textbooks tweak to the right

    American history goes rogue

    This is a response to “Rewriting American history” [News, April 4].

    Revisionist history was a charge levied against the Soviets. We maintained that our history contained the credible elements of a social science. Now Texas greets Joe McCarthy as a hero, Franklin D. Roosevelt as a Great Depression instigator and President Barack Obama as an Islamic socialist?

    If ideologues want to reconstruct events and people, let them write books such as Palin’s “Going Rogue” and sell them at Costco.

    But in schools, children risk brainwashing. Ideology triumphs over providing them with objective constructs for understanding events.

    Sure, the left and right pen nastily tendentious stuff. Pundits for each side rebut. Who rebuts in school when Teddy Roosevelt is portrayed as a socialist? What test grade do you get for thinking of him, instead, as the quintessential Rough Rider?

    Pretty scary, and growing. That is what the right seems bent upon: Recreating events to suit the special interests funding supposedly neutral think tanks that disguise the ideology, calling it “history.”

    — Peter Loeb, Sequim

  • 2 Desert Hot Springs officers charged with excessive force for allegedly Tasering unarmed suspects

    A Desert Hot Springs police officer and a former officer have been charged with using excessive force when they stunned three unarmed suspects, two of whom were handcuffed, federal prosecutors said Tuesday.

    Officer Anthony Sclafani, 40, and former officer David Raymond Henderson, 51, surrendered voluntarily and were booked Tuesday in downtown Los Angeles before an afternoon court appearance.

    A federal grand jury indicted the men last year on civil rights charges for three incidents in 2004 and 2005.

    Sclafani allegedly used an X26 Taser gun in February 2005 to stun a man who was handcuffed and in police custody in the Desert Hot Springs jail, according to the indictment and an interview with Asst. U.S. Attorney Steven Arkow.

    In a separate incident the next day, Sclafani allegedly used a Taser to stun a woman detained in the jail and pepper sprayed her face and eyes.

    Henderson is charged with stunning a handcuffed man during an arrest in August 2004 when he worked for the department.

    Calls to the Desert Hot Springs Police Department were not immediately returned.

    Henderson’s attorney, Vicki Podberesky, said she could not comment because she had not seen the charges. An attorney for Sclafani did not immediately return phone calls or an e-mail message.

    — Tony Barboza

  • Official Nexus One car dock en route

    We have heard several stories over the last couple of weeks about new things appearing on the Google phone store, but each time the page is quickly returned to normal.

    Today one of our readers spotted the highly anticipated official car dock listed for $55, but he was unable to order it because the item was listed as temporarily unavailable. He did manage to grab the link to the Car Dock help page so it appears this item is coming soon.

    The car dock uses bluetooth to communicate with the Nexus One and automatically establishes a connection when the phone is inserted. The Car Home application is then launched with allows the user easy access to Maps and Navigation, Contacts, and Voice Search. Built-in speakers provide music playback and calls using the speakerphone.

    From GoogleThe Nexus One Car Dock is the perfect place to put your phone when you’re in the car. In addition to holding your Nexus One, the car dock also charges your phone’s battery, lets you use your phone handsfree, and provides easier access to voice and navigation apps.

    The dock’s built-in speakers and volume controls also enhance the in-car music and media experience. And the Car Home app, which loads automatically, makes it easy to access Maps and Navigation, Voice Search, Contacts, and Music.

    You can mount the dock on the windshield or dashboard, and it ships with an adhesive disc that lets you attach it to a textured surface as well. The dock comes with a charger to fit into your car’s 12V utility socket, and the holder can rotate for flexible orientation.

    From the car dock user's guide.

    [Thank you Brett for the tip]

    Related Posts

  • Revisiting Chernobyl

    Dear Colleagues,

    April 26, 2010 will mark 24 the anniversary of the Chernobyl nuclear accident in Ukraine. The Chernobyl anniversary provides a fitting time and backdrop to revisit the issues relating to safety and environmental aspects of nuclear power plants, specially the global effects of the Chernobyl accident, which proved that radioactive radiation, recognize no boundaries.

    In 2003, an United Nations inter-agency initiative, the Chernobyl Forum was launched to investigate the environmental, health, and socio-economic consequences of the Chernobyl accident. The Chernobyl Forum, convened by International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), in cooperation with World Health Organization (WHO), and United Nations Development Program (UNDP), as well as selected officials from Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus published three reports in September 2005. According to their studies; 4000 projected deaths, hundreds of billions of dollar in damage, millions of acres of habitable land contaminated, and hundreds of thousand people were permanently evacuated from their homes in Ukraine, Belarus, Russia and Moldova.

    However, the findings of Chernobyl Forum is highly contested by many independent organizations and researchers who argue that IAEA-drafted summary contradicts the key findings of the Chernobyl forum as well as the findings of a 1993 study conducted by the UN, Scientific Radiation on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR). They point out that, it overlooks independent scientific data that have been accumulated over the twenty years and the report contradicts some of its conclusions. The major problem was IAEA drafted summary report which was deliberately misleading the public. Considering the fact that IAEA being a global promoter of nuclear power and its mutual censorship agreement signed with WHO in 1959, they concluded that Forum’s latest report is a “Whitewash”, not accurately portray of Chernobyl accident’s total/ global impact, therefore, it is a deliberate misleading, and it is a typical IAEA’s effort that benefits the nuclear industry.

    Before April 26 1986, Soviet nuclear scientists had stated that a catastrophic accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant was impossible. But on April 29, when a United States surveillance satellite confirmed that Chernobyl’s reactor number four was burning with red fire, and rumors from Sweden that a major nuclear accident had occurred in the Soviet Union became inescapable reality, in spite of the Soviet government’s denials.

    When the impossible world’s worst nuclear reactor accident happened, reactor power level reached to 30 GW, 10 times more than design power output, a steam explosion triggered a nuclear excursion explosion, within 3 seconds a thunderous blast lifted the massive 2000 tons of concrete lid from the reactor core, and released huge amounts of radioactive debris that was carried two thousand meters into the air. The reactors core, 1700 metric tons of mostly graphite moderators burned two more weeks, increasing the emission of radioactive Cesium-137 and strontium-90 particles into atmosphere, effecting more than 20 nations that were in the radioactive fallout’s path.

    The total amount of immeasurable radioactivity released will never be known, but the official Soviet figure of 90 million curies suggests a minimum, says Dr. Yuri M. Shcherbak, a former Supreme Soviet member of the U.S.R.R and ambassador of Ukraine to USA who, in 1989 initiated the first parliamentary investigation of the Chernobyl accident in the Soviet Union. Although, the total amount of radioactivity that effected most of Europe and Asia was estimated several times more by Western scientists, the conservative Soviet figures correspond to hundreds of times more radiation (0.01 kiloton of TNT equivalent to 40 GJ of energy), than that produced by the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki at the end of the second world war.

    The exact circumstances will probably never be known because chief operators of unit 4 reactor, Mr. Akimov and Mr. Toptunow along with night crew of April 6 1986 have died within the 3 weeks of accident from acute radiation sickness.
    Aftermath of the first twenty four years

    The debate surrounding the increased prevalence of diseases induced from the Chernobyl accident is likely to continue for many decades. Up to this date, it is not clear how many people have already died, or are suffering from illness resulting from Chernobyl radiation, due to systematically relocating and sending the local children away to different areas in the Soviet Union, and destroying medical records of victims. In Ukraine along 2.6 million contaminated inhabitants living in 2300 villages and towns were relocated.

    However, so far, ”32.000 deaths are defensible” says Dr. Shcherbak, most of them are the so called “liquidators”, 800.000 workers who were involved in putting out the initial fire, cleaning out the blown-reactor core and burying them in nearby sites. According to the Russian Ministry for Civil Defense 38 % of the liquidators suffer from some disease, and the Ukrainian Ministry of Health in their annual 1995 press conference stated that ”according to inter-ministerial expert councils the 805 of liquidators deaths only in 1993 and 532 deaths in 1994 were connected with Chernobyl accident effects.”

    After twenty four years of the nuclear reactor accident, 260.000 Square kilometers of land is still contaminated with radioactive cesium 137 and Strontium 90 in Ukraine, Russia, Moldova and Belarus, exceeding 1 curie / km2 in some regions, and effecting nearly 9 million people. Strontium-90 is chemically similar to calcium, therefore concentrates in the bone of the developing infant, child and adolescent. Once in the bone, it irradiates the marrow where the cells of the immune system are created. Within 30 kilometers of the Chernobyl plant there are no inhabitants, and about 60 settlements inside this zone were relocated to different places.

    During the first few days of the accident, 13.000 children had inhaled aerosols containing iodine 131, a short lived radioactive isotope which induces thyroid cancer. About 4000 of these children have received up to 2.000 roentgen equivalents of radiation doses that is 20 times more than the maximum recommended dose for nuclear industry workers for an entire year.

    So far, the Ukrainian government has been spending more than 5 percent of its budget to provide benefits for more than 3 million people who are officially recognized as victims of the Chernobyl catastrophe, including 356.000 liquidators and 870.000 children. Having major economic crises, it is not clear how along the Ukrainian government can maintain these benefits. Tens of thousands of metric tons of nuclear fuel and reactor parts were buried in rush in 800 different sites within the 30 kilometer zone, still representing radioactivity levels of some 20 million curies. In order to clean up this dangerously contaminated zone in the world, it will take at least 30 years, and billions of dollars.

    In addition, existing sarcophagus of unit 4 which houses about 200 tons of nuclear waste consisting melted reactor core or an unearthly radioactive-lava is a ticking time bomb. It cost 300 million dollars to build in hurry in six months, and was planned to last 20 years. However, this structure’s western walls is already bulged and it leaks rain and melted snow, according to experts it could simply collapse any time due to a small earthquake resulting a new Chernobyl disaster. In order to prevent further destruction, building a “super-sarcophagus” around the existing one, after long negotiations with Western countries, is being constructed and will be completed in 2012. Construction work on a new sarcophagus is estimated to cost 1.2 billion dollars.

    In Europe, many countries suffered economic losses. According to the Belarus government, the total economic damage caused between 1986 and 2005 will be $ 235 billion which is equivalent to 21 times its 1991 national budget, and as of 1994 the Belarus government spent 13.46 % of its budget to minimize the consequences of the Chernobyl accident.

    The total loss to the Soviet Union was prepared by Yuri Koryakin, the then-chief economist of the Research and Development Institute of Power Engineering of the Soviet Union, his analysis showed that the total loss to the Soviet Union between 1986 and 2000 will be equivalent to $ 283-358 billion. After the accident, the total cost of compensations paid by some European governments to farmers who had to destroy their livestock and crops were $18 million in England, $ 307 million in Germany, and $ 94 million in Austria.

    On December, 2000, Ukrainian officials meet with IAEA and European Union (EU) officials to discuss the possibilities of permanently closing remaining three reactors in Chernobyl. Estimates were that the first phase of decommissioning three units, projected over 5 years horizon, and would cost $ 85 million per year, with tasks mainly focused on removal of wastes and nuclear fuel. On December 15, 2000, After securing financial assistant from EU, Ukrainian government, permanently shut down the 925 MW, unit 3 at the Chernobyl power plant, disabling the last remaining reactor at ill-fated nuclear power plant complex.

    Turkey surrounded with worst nuclear reactors in the World.

    In response to the constantly growing International concern over the safety of old Soviet-designed reactors that are operating around the world, the United States Department of Energy (DOE) conducted an intelligence study in 1993 titled “Most dangerous reactors”. The purpose of this project was to study Soviet designed and built reactors currently operating in the successor states which are in deteriorating economic, political turmoil and lacking from sufficient technical and regulatory oversights. As of February 1995, nine Soviet built power plants have been surveyed and the preliminary top five worst power plants-reactors happened to be Chernobyl in Ukraine, Kozloduy in Bulgaria, Kola in Russia, Iganalina in Lithuania, and Metzamor in Armenia.

    Unfortunately, Turkey is situated in the middle of the most dangerous reactors operating in the world today.

    Bulgaria and Romania: In the west, Bulgaria had to close 4 of its 6 Old Russian design nuclear reactors in 2003 and 2006, all of which had been condemned by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Operational Safety Assessment Review Team (OSART), and in 1991, called for the immediate shutdown of this first generation Soviet design and built reactors. Romania has two Canada design Candu-6 reactors which are not being marketed any more by Canadians.

    Armenia: In the east, Metzamor power plant in Armenia was closed shortly after the December 1989 earthquake and due to local opposition was never to be reopened again. But cut off from major energy supplies and having severe economical conditions, Armenia has gambled by starting unit 2 in 1995. Although the G-7 countries and World Bank were opposed to unit-2’s restart, it was determined by IAEA experts that, because of its age and that the plant is situated in the middle of the most seismically active and dangerous fault, that the Madzamor power plant unit-2 can operate only until the end of 2004, provided, if the facility complies with the all the IAEA’s applicable safety and technological upgrading requirements.

    Prior to restart of Metzamor unit-2, the Armenian Government has signed an agreement with IAEA and European Union to receive necessary financial and technological support to upgrade and operate the unit-2 close to the western standards, and has agreed to close permanently the Metzemor unit-2 by the end of year 2004. Unfortunately, Armenian government did not honor their commitment to close the Metzamor nuclear power plant in 2004, and at the present time this power plant is running as a time bomb in the Ararat valley, threatening more than two million people life’s on the both Turkish and Armenian side of border.

    Ukraine: In the north, the worst of the worst, remaining of the Chernobyl power plant complex and existing /old Soviet designed reactors. These type of reactors have serious problems, abound in nearly every face of the operation since they were commissioned to generate electricity and Pu-239 for the Soviet nuclear weapons program, and racing against the time for another accident. As a result of losing a vital cooling system, on October 11 1991, a fire started in the Chernobyl unit 2 reactor, another meltdown of the power plant was prevented by heroic efforts of plant workers and this unit had to be shutdown and was out of commission since then. Until final shutdown of all units in year 2000, remaining units were operating in very poor technical conditions that are expected to significantly increase the likelihood of a large scale accident.

    Russia: In north, due to weak regulations, poor moral, and funding difficulties at Kola power plant in Russia has experienced 43 off-normal events (small accidents) in 1993 alone, representing nearly 25 % of all events reported in Russia. After a long international pressure, four of VVER-420 reactors at kola were schedule to be closed in 2004, however, with a few upgrades these reactors are pushed to operate over their design life time of 30 years. In March 1994, a pipe rupture in Kola-2 that leaked about a fourth of the reactors primary coolant leading to a possible meltdown, fortunately this event happened when the plant was shutdown for maintenance.
    There are two types of Soviet designed and built reactors in existence of 10 major nuclear power plants, consisting 31 nuclear reactors for the purpose of generating electricity. They are the RBMK-boiling water reactors and the VVER-pressurized light water reactors. The RBMK is a boiling-water, graphite-moderated, pressure-tube reactor that designed to be refueled during the operation and therefore harvesting maximum plutonium-239 for Soviets nuclear weapons program. Nuclear fuel is contained in approximately 1700 of individual pressure tubes vertically mounted in a large graphite core. Cool water passes through these tubes and is boiled by nuclear heat to produce steam which is transferred to turbine generators for the production of electricity.

    The RBMK design does not meet Western standards, and deficiencies are known to exist in the emergency core cooling system, fire protection system, and instrumentation and control systems. Most importantly, these types of reactors lack a Western-style containment building, and are also susceptible to dangerous power instabilities. It was this extreme power excursion, combined with a series of operational errors that led to the Chernobyl accident in 1986. These type power plants are still operating in Russian Federation and in Ex-Soviet-Sites.

    The other three worst nuclear power plants operating at Metzamor-Armenia, Kozlouy- Bulgaria, and Kola-Russia are the VVER-440/230-270 type reactors developed as civilian power plants, similar to Western pressurized water reactors (PWR). It employs low-enriched uranium oxide fuel held in thin metal-clad rods that are cooled by pressurized light water. The pressurized water from the reactor is pumped through steam generators, where steam is produced by transfer of heat to the separate secondary coolant. The steam is then routed to the turbine generators to produce roughly 440 mega watts of electricity. These reactors also don’t meet Western standards, they have many design deficiencies including the lack of a containment building, inadequate fire protection systems, unreliable instrumentation and control systems, and deficient systems for cooling the reactor core in case of an emergency.

    In order to meet most Western standards, Russia in early 1990 has developed a third VVER generation design called VVER-1000 and last 10 years VVER-1400 which are the large reactors that can generate more than 1000 mega watts of electricity. However, these new reactors being built in India, Iran and Russia have no proven safety operational performance yet. New VVEW-1400 reactor’s safety/fire protection, instrumentation and control systems of these new type of reactors are based on computer simulation sand does not meet European Union standards . In fact Russia has failed to get neither a design certificate nor a license to build this type of reactors in Belene site in Bulgaria and currently trying to build this type of reactors in Akkuyu Turkey.

    Despite massive international concern over nuclear safety in the former Soviet Union, and hundreds of millions of dollars in grants and loans to successor states, there has been an insignificant increase in safety, and only some of these high risk-worst reactors have been permanently closed. If one of these worst reactors like one in Armenia operating around Turkey suffers from a moderate-sized loss-of-coolant accident, a direct release of radioactive materials into the surrounding environment is inevitable because, all these first generation reactors lack containments. In the event, like what happened at the Chernobyl site twenty years ago, where the failure of a reactor vessel resulting in the upward ejection of the vessel and penetrating the protective dome would mean a major radiation release that recognizes no boundaries.

    Nuclear reactors and public health

    Although cancer is commonly perceived as a disease that strikes randomly and without warning, this misconception ignores the results of thousands of investigations on the causes of cancer. The conclusion emerging from these investigations is that most human cancers are caused by chemicals, viruses, heredity, and radiation.

    Radiation-induced carcinogenesis resembles chemical carcinogenesis in its basic mode action in the living cells. Like most chemicals carcinogens, radiation is mutagenic and is therefore thought to initiate malignant transformation by causing DNA damage. Many years usually intervene between exposure to an initiating dose of radiation and the appearance of a malignancy, suggesting that subsequent exposure to promoting agents plays a role in stimulating radiation-damaged cells to divide and form tumors, and if it is not detected; leads to cancer.

    There have been many studies indicating that low level radiation from reactor accident and bomb fallouts, and routine low level radioactive isotopes released from nuclear power plants, may have done more damage to humans and other living things than previously thought. Dr. Abram Petkau, a Canadian radiation biologist, experimentally proved that the longer the exposure, the smaller the dose needed to damage the blood cells of the immune system. He concluded that free radicals are created when macromolecules of the immune system are subject to lingering low levels of ionizing radiation. A free radical is a vigorous charged particle that attacks other molecules of living cells to neutralize itself by knocking off an electron from its target, during this process it destroys the chemical compositions of molecules necessary for daily life, including DNA molecules that make up the fundamental blocks of life.

    It has been known for many years that molecular structure of the DNA chain is destroyed, if it is subject to any ionizing electromagnetic radiation beyond visible light, such as; ultra-violet, X-rays and gamma rays, which are generated in almost every type of radioactive decays. As a matter of fact, when a very low level of radiation is penetrated into DNA molecules (A-adenine, T- thymine, G-guanine, and C-cytosine ), the energy of this radiation is usually absorbed and transmuted into heat by nitrogenous base of the adenine, guanine, cytosine leaving DNA most of the time intact.

    But, it is quite harmful if the energy is absorbed by one thymine neighboring on another thymine in the DNA chain, in this case, before the absorbed energy has a chance to be transformed into heat, the two neighboring thymines enter into a chemical reaction forming a new chemical compound called a thymine photodimer. Damage has been inflicted on DNA, meaning that, in the place of two thymines, there has appeared an entirely new chemical compound that halts further progress of the enzymes working on DNA. After millions of years of evolutionary training to recognize only the letters A,T,G, and C, the enzymes will balk at this mysterious newcomer, and they will not be able to transcribe DNA’s information and synthesize RNA-proteins, thus all life in the cell will come to a stand-still, and will perish.
    In the light of these crucial findings, it is worth mentioning the following studies conducted by Dr. Ernest J. Strenglass, Professor of Emeritus of Radiology at the University of Pittsburgh Medical School, and Dr. Jay Gould, a well known statistician and former member of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

    The state of South Carolina houses the Savannah River nuclear weapons plant that has been in operation for 30 years, and is one of the most radioactive places on earth. Almost one billion curies of high-level nuclear waste are stored in this complex representing more than half of the U.S government’s inventory. Dr, Strenglass and Gould analysis of state medical records showed that during a 15 year period, 1968-83, the death rate from infant diseases in South Carolina increased 13 percent, and infant mortality from birth defects showed a more startling increase, rising 25 percent faster than in the U.S average. During this period, South Carolina also experienced a three-fold increase in excess lung cancer, and readings of stonium-90 in the bones of young children rose by 45 percent.
    After the Three Miles Island (TMI) accident of March 28, 1979, some 2.500 lawsuits have been filed against the Metropolitan Edison Company, the owner-operator of TMI, by plaintiffs who were living close to the power plant. They claim to suffer from a host of radiation-induced illnesses such as: birth defects, spontaneous abortions, sterility, cancers, and leukemia. Indeed, official 1979-1980 Pennsylvania vital static’s showed that the infant mortality rate for Dauphin County was 37 percent higher than the rate of the previous two years. While during the same period, the U.S infant mortality rate dropped by 8 percent. In fact, Dr. Gloud’s analysis also showed that infant mortality from birth defects in the ten-county area surrounding TMI rose over 20 percent faster than in the U.S.

    Swiss health authorities published a set of annual mortality data covering the period since World War II. It should be noted that all five nuclear reactors built in Switzerland since 1968, have released significant amounts of radioactive isotopes into the environment, and are located in the Swiss plateau where the most part of the six million Swiss population reside. Statistical analysis of Swiss data by Dr. Strenglass and Gloud has revealed the following facts: Swiss mortality rate, death per 1000 people, for leukemia and non-epithelial cancer was 0.16 in 1945, which increased to 0.32 in 1983. There was a sharp rise of breast cancer at the rate of 5.5 percent a year from 1980 to 1983. The percentage of total deaths accounted for by those aged 25 to 44, due to infectious diseases rose from 0.66 in 1983 to 1.14 in 1989, a gain of 72 percent.

    Finally an analysis of the extreme detailed Oregon State vital statistics published by the Oregon State Department of Human Resources indicated that deaths due to leukemia increased 70 percent in Portland between 1980 and 1988, where the Trojan nuclear power plant has been in operation since 1975. For Oregon as a whole the leukemia mortality rate rose 32 percent while it declined 2.7 percent for the entire U.S. during this period. The link to the radioactive releases from the Trojan plant is strengthened by a similar rise in leukemia incidence around the Pilgrim nuclear plant as reported by the Massachusetts State Department of Health. Both plants had comparable releases of radioactive iodine and bone-seeking fission products into the air and water since 1976, in both cases, the leukemia rates decreased with distance away from the power plant.

    Today, 24 years of following Chernobyl, 31 years after Three Miles Island, and more than 60 years after the launch of the Atom for Peace program, nuclear power continues to be a failed technology. There remains no solution of the problem of mounting huge piles of lethal radioactive waste, nuclear power still the most expensive way to provide electricity, and continued operation of atomic reactors poses unacceptable and unpredictable safety, public health and weapon proliferation risks around the World.

    These are some of the facts of so called nuclear age-life that we have to live with and there is no level of radiation low enough to be deemed safe. As a primary physician and witness of Chernobyl accident, Dr. Shcerbak has stated in his article published in the April, 1996 issue of the Scientific American, that ”the disaster illustrates the great responsibility that falls on the solders of Scientists and other experts who give advice to politicians on technical matters… Humankind lost a sort of innocence on April 26, 1986. We have embarked on a new, post-Chernobyl era, and we have yet to comprehend all the consequences”.

    Your comments are always welcome.

    Hayrettin KILIC, NY, USA

  • What Yelp Has to Say For Itself

    Local business review site Yelp held a press phone call this morning to discuss major changes it’s making to its site and business. Faced with class action lawsuits by business owners alleging they’ve been extorted by Yelp, the service has decided to make filtered-out reviews publicly visible and has removed the option for advertisers to push their favorite review to the top of their business’s page.

    Did Yelp just cry Uncle? Is this the beginning of the end for its most important revenue stream, as some have argued? Here’s what we found most interesting about the call today.

    Sponsor

    Yelp Gets Hit Hard With Questionable Reviews

    Surprise, surprise – there are a lot of people out there who appear to be trying to game Yelp. This morning the company added a link at the bottom of each business’s page to “filtered reviews.” Those are the ones that the Yelp algorithm determined weren’t trustworthy enough to display on the site. They used to just disappear into a mysterious black hole, something many people found suspicious. Now you can look at them, and most of the time you can see why the reviews were yanked. There are a lot of them, too.

    CEO Jeremy Stoppelman said he hoped exposing these buried reviews would put to rest the “myth” that the company buries positive reviews if companies don’t buy advertising and will give site users a chance to see the “unique challenge we face.”

    Did Yelp Just Kill The Golden Goose?

    Some critics have alleged that the ability to put favorite reviews on top of the page was the most compelling thing Yelp had to offer advertisers. The new video slideshows aren’t nearly as compelling as highlighting the good news and pushing down the bad news, they say.

    Stoppelman offered a relatively convincing response to that when we asked him about it. He said that search placement is actually the biggest thing advertisers are paying for. “Favorite reviews” have limited draw, he said, because the site’s natural Yelp Sort algorithm already displays reviews with a businesses’s average rating or better at the top of the page automatically. He also said that round tables of business owners across multiple cities identified video advertising as the best possible substitute for the feature. Consider me convinced.

    Complainers Are Just Complaining

    Are businesses that complain about Yelp just upset that Stoppelman has built such a compelling site they feel obligated to advertise there, we asked? The Yelp CEO said in response that many small businesses are used to advertising in the newspaper and on radio and that the traditional local advertising market has been disrupted by Yelp. “Yelp represents a shift in the local business landscape,” Stoppelman said. “When those shifts happen, you’ll see some people lose out and then they’ll register their complaints.”

    Do Yelp sales people pressure local business owners into advertising on the site? Do they wield the relative placement of positive and negative reviews like a weapon? It’s hard to know what goes on in those conversations, but there are certainly countless business owners who are accustomed to paying for pure positivity in the form of traditional advertising and for whom the presence or risk of negative feedback on a site like Yelp is alarming to the core. As Craigslist founder Craig Newmark said in a blog post today, “By the end of this decade, power and influence will shift largely to those people with the best reputations and trust networks, from people with money and nominal power.” That’s where Yelp operates and it represents a change in the world.

    Yelp’s changes today seem like wise ones to me. This kind of transparency is likely to be helpful as the world of local business becomes more complicated thanks to the internet.

    Discuss


  • VIX. RIP. (VXX)

    The below chart is of the VIX (VIX) the so-called volatility index. It would be silly to point out how low the volatility is, because we’d just be repeating something that’s been said a million times before.

    Instead let us just remind you how many times you’ve seen predictions that the VIX just COULDN’T get any lower on this runup, and that a shock return to volatility HAD to be right around the corner. How many folks have lost money making that bet? (Thanks to Joshua Brown for the inspiration).

    chart

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  • Huge Offshore Wind Network Could Solve the Calm-Day Problem | 80beats

    windmill-turbine-2

    When it comes to generating clean energy, the strong offshore winds that blow in from the ocean are a great source. But while these sea breezes are often stronger than land winds, they’re not consistent; instead their force tends to ebb and flow like the tides. Wind turbines that use offshore winds to produce energy can therefore have a tough time maintaining a steady supply of power, but now scientists from the University of Delaware have proposed a novel idea on how to keep the power supply steady.

    In a new paper published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Willet Kempton and his team suggest that by connecting offshore wind farms in a long network running along the entire Eastern Seaboard, power fluctuations could be cut down, as electricity from interconnected farms would be easier to manage and more valuable than from wind at a single location [BusinessWeek]. The researchers suggest that by creating a 1,550-mile-long network of wind turbines, the network could provide power from Massachusetts to North Carolina.

    Kempton says linking the turbines would also help eliminate the possibility of a complete power outage should wind speeds drop in any one location. If the wind drops in North Carolina, say, power could be rerouted from somewhere else in the network where the winds are blowing strongly, scientists explain. The concept is simple: If you spread out wind stations far enough, each one will experience a different weather pattern. So it’s very unlikely that a slackening of the wind would affect all stations at once. The result is steadier power [Wired.com].

    Kempton’s team proposed the idea after studying five years of offshore wind data from Florida to Maine. Simulating a series of underwater transmission cables that stretched about 1,550 miles and connected 11 stations, which they called the “Atlantic transmission grid,” scientists found that although individual stations showed erratic power supplies, the aggregate power output changed very little. Not once during the five year period studied did the overall power output drop to zero. “We took an intermittent resource and made it not intermittent anymore,” Kempton said [Wired.com].

    Though the United States is the world’s largest producer of wind power, no commercial offshore wind farms are up and running yet here; Kempton’s research may provide support for the various offshore wind projects in the planning stages along the Atlantic coast. Mark Jacobson, a civil and environmental engineer at Standford University comments: “The technology’s there, the materials are there, we have the willpower to reduce carbon emissions, we have a reliable power supply that doesn’t lead to fuel shortage…. The next step is really to start implementing this on a large scale” [Wired.com]. However, installing cables like those Kempton used in his study to hypothetically connect the different turbines could cost as much as $1.4 billion.

    Related Content:
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    80beats: Wind Turbines Could Theoretically Power the Entire World, and Then Some
    80beats: Will New York City Harness Wind Power?

    Image: iStockphoto