Auteur Sujet: jpst CDC expands data tool PLACES to help with equity of COVID-19 vaccinations  (Lu 25 fois)

Morrisshot

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 9400
Mviu She was legally declared dead by Social Security  鈥?even though she  s still alive
 President Joe Biden announced a more than $600 million investment inclimate resilienceMonday, a pot of money that could help vulnerable communities better withstand the extremes of a destabilizing climate.The money comes from the billions of dollars set aside forclimate preparednessin the Inflation Reduction Act. It includes a $575 million fund from which the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration will award money to community-led projects that prepare neighborhoods and ecosystems for sea level rise, flooding and strong storms. We re investing in the people and the places that have been hit the hardest but who are also on the front lines of leading us forward,  Biden said Monday while speaking at a marsh near Palo Alto, California, which was once a community landfill.Americans coast to coast are already busy preparin vaso stanley g for and living through weather extremes.Michael Markovich lives in Colorado, where strong summer storms are drenching cities in much more rain than usual. He installed concrete barriers on his property in March after flooding last year, and during a recent storm, the creek near his house rose about  stanley cups nine inches. Last year if that would have happened, we d be standing in water,  Markovich told Scripps News Denver.SEE MORE: Climate change blamed for wildfire smoke impacting the USThe President s announcement means communities could use NOAA-provided funds to p stanley quencher repare residents like Markovich for similar floods.Separately, the president outlined millions his Xbuq Jamaican bobsled team heads to Olympics for first time in 24 years
 TAMPA, Fla. -- A marine biologist with the Florida Aquarium said shark attacks are rare, but he has suggestions for swimmers to try and prevent an attack. Don t swim alone, avoid murky water, avoid really flashy jewelry and don t go out too far,  said Eric Hovland, a marine biologist. Eric Hovland, a marine biologist with the Florida Aquarium, cares for sharks. He has also went diving with great white sharks in Mexico.  Occasionally,  stanley cup we ll see nurse sharks and lemon sharks and bull sharks in our Tampa Bay area and there s a few other species you may find,   stanley cup said Hovland. On Wednesday, 21-year-old Jordan Lindsey was snorkeling with her family during a vacation in the Bahamas when she was attacked by three sharks.RELATED: An  stanley water bottle American woman was killed in a Bahamas shark attack while snorkeling with her familyShe was attacked near Rose Island. The sharks bit Lindsey on the arms, legs and buttocks and detached her right arm. Her family tried to warn her about the sharks, but it was too late.Hovland said shark attacks are rare, but sightings seem more common now that everyone has a cell phone. In Florida s Panhandle, Navarre Beach Fire Rescue shared video of what they estimated to be a 13-foot hammerhead shark swimming near shore.Cindy Coffman took cell phone video of a shark in Brevard County on Tuesday on Canova Beach around 4 p.m. She believes it was a lemon shark or a nurse shark and said it was about 6 feet long  We do see more of those sightings simply because we have more too