badbrainstorm

joined 1 year ago
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[–] badbrainstorm@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago (2 children)

IRC will never die! I mean, it probably will eventually. It's still fairly popular with Linux users, and even stil preinstalled on some distros

[–] badbrainstorm@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

Tik Tok, Ukraine, and Palistine. Day one

[–] badbrainstorm@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago

I don't think that's full of candy, kid

[–] badbrainstorm@lemmy.world 24 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Or they're to busy taking 105 vacations a year, after they helped the corporations pull up the ladder behind them

[–] badbrainstorm@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago

I would love to see a video of this in style of running of the bulls, where Big Bird is just destroying their asses

[–] badbrainstorm@lemmy.world 10 points 1 week ago

The Paypal mafia will level up. Such a gross thought

[–] badbrainstorm@lemmy.world 10 points 1 week ago

Free ranging in style

[–] badbrainstorm@lemmy.world 15 points 1 week ago

He probably thinks straws look phallic, on account of him having a micro penis

[–] badbrainstorm@lemmy.world 6 points 1 week ago

It's ready for her turn to ride you

[–] badbrainstorm@lemmy.world 5 points 1 week ago

Gaht Damn!!!

 

laist.com

With many of L.A.’s COVID-19 renter protections now gone, evictions in 2023 have been rising well above pre-pandemic levels. Due to new rental housing regulations put in place by L.A.’s city council earlier this year, City Controller Kenneth Mejia is now able to track where those evictions are playing out across the city.

Mejia’s office released a new data set on Monday showing that Hollywood, Fairfax and Downtown L.A. have had particularly high numbers of eviction filings. And about 13% of eviction notices in the data are for amounts less than $1,534, the fair market rent for an L.A. studio apartment, raising questions about compliance with a new city tenant protection rule.

“We hope this map and analysis informs policy makers and the public about our city’s housing/eviction crisis,” Mejia tweeted, linking to the data’s release.

Since late January, L.A. landlords have been required to send the city’s housing department written notice every time they file an eviction against a tenant. The data released by Mejia’s office shows that from Jan. 27 to July 31, the housing department received 39,677 eviction notices.

The vast majority of those notices (96%) have been for non-payment of rent. During the pandemic, the city’s tenant protections gave legal defenses to renters who couldn’t pay on time due to economic harms brought on by COVID-19. But those non-payment protections expired on April 1 — meaning tenants could face eviction for failing to pay rent from that point on.

Hollywood, Downtown L.A. and Fairfax are hard hit

Evictions have been filed all across the city in recent months, but the data shows some areas receiving particularly high filing volumes. ZIP codes in Hollywood (90028), Fairfax (90036) and Downtown L.A. (90015) have received the highest number of evictions.

City council districts with the highest number of eviction filings include Councilmember Kevin de León’s district 14, Councilmember Hugo Soto-Martinez’s district 13 and Councilmember Katy Young Yaroslavsky’s district 5.

Landlord groups have long complained that the city’s non-payment protections allowed tenants to live rent-freefor years. But the housing department data reveals very few examples of tenants racking up huge debts. Only about 6% of non-payment eviction notices were for amounts above $10,000.

Instead, the data shows that the median amount owed in non-payment cases is $2,678.84, suggesting that most defendants are only a couple months behind on rent.

City leaders are currently considering a policy that would provide free attorneys to many renters in eviction court, but that plan is still in early stages.

With homelessness in L.A. rising 10% over the past year according to a recent count, Mayor Karen Bass has said that the possibility of more tenants getting evicted makes her “concerned that we're going to have another spike in homelessness.”

Are new eviction rules working?

Just before local COVID-19 protections expired, the L.A. city council passed a host of new tenant rights, seeking to prevent the “eviction tsunami” renter advocates worried was coming.

On March 27, one of those protections took effect: L.A. renters can now defend themselves against eviction if they’re behind by less than one month’s worth of “fair market rent” as determined by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

But about 13% of non-payment eviction notices in the data are for amounts less than $1,534, the fair market rent for an L.A. studio apartment, raising questions about compliance with the city’s new eviction protections.

Notably, the data released by Mejia’s office pre-dates another huge change in L.A. housing policy. On Aug. 1, just after this data set ends, renters in the city faced a deadlineto pay back all the rent they had missed during the first 19 months of the pandemic.

Many tenants said they were unable to repay their pandemic rent debts by Aug. 1. But little financial help has been available to them. Only a new trove of data can show whether the repayment deadline triggered another spike in eviction filings.

What questions do you have about housing in Southern California?

 

www.latimes.com

The sea has long inspired a human attraction, perhaps even a compulsion, to be as close to the edge as possible. Its sheer power captivates us, even on its most turbulent days, and we can’t help but dream of calling the shore our own. To be out by the surf, to sense the very limits of where land can go, to feel the rise and fall of each wave like our own breath is to reckon with a force so alive it feels otherworldly. But the ocean is not “out there” beyond the shore, it is upon us, carving away at the coast each day despite our best efforts to keep the water at bay. We thought that with enough ingenuity we could contain the sea, but the rising tide is proving otherwise.

Studying this confluence of land, people and sea has kept Gary Griggs busy for much of his life. Seventy-six years old, with a shock of white hair and a long stride, Griggs has spent decades examining every inch of the California coast. An oceanographer, coastal geologist and longtime professor at UC Santa Cruz, he has a way of explaining erosion with the excitement of someone who’s seeing everything for the first time. The coast is always, has always been, changing, he likes to say. Every high and low tide brings new surprises.

On a quiet foggy morning in early March 2020, the tide was going out when Griggs set off for a stroll in Capitola. Reminiscent of an idyllic village on the Mediterranean, with pops of vintage California, this colorful little beach town on the northeast shore of Monterey Bay amuses him every time he swings by. The buildings and shingled cottages are bright pastel, the waterfront dotted with cafes and patio umbrellas. Palm trees and art galleries line the streets downtown, where tourists stop for trinkets and ice cream. On an old wooden wharf that juts 800-some feet into the water, kayakers can step from a tiny dock and paddle out to sea.

Griggs made his way to a set of townhouses that had been planted right on the sand, reportedly one of the first condominium complexes to have been built on the coast. Purple, pink and teal, with whimsical rococo plasterwork, the Venetian Court homes are an indelible snapshot of 1920s California. Steps from the wharf, they serve mostly as private vacation rentals today. A low concrete seawall — so low you could sit on it — is all that holds back the sea. Image of book cover for "California Against the Sea."

He stooped down, placed his hand on the concrete and noticed it was damp. The ocean often surges over this wall and can flood the entire complex with debris. Poking around, he pointed to piles of sandbags and plywood propped against a number of front doors — humble defenses against the water that had already arrived. Patio chairs, also damp, were stacked into a corner next to a grill covered by a heavy-duty tarp. He pulled out a recent real estate advertisement and read it out loud:

Iconic home on the beach. 1st time on market in almost 50 years. 3 bed, 2, bath, offsite parking. Updated kitchen and baths. Stunning! Price Reduced | $4,800,000

“On the sand, on the sand, on the sand,” Griggs said. “Everybody wants to live on the sand.” He understands this pull to the water, a mark of wealth and well-being that goes hand in hand with today’s notion of the California dream. But by romanticizing the coast in all its vast and freeing splendor, we blind ourselves to the very forces that created this landscape in the first place.

He craned his head to inspect the colorful condo in front of him. Whenever the beach goes underwater and the waves move in, this corner building looks like the prow of a ship lost at sea. Griggs has photos of whitewash splashing halfway up the first row of windows. Next door, the aging wharf also braces against tempestuous surf. Big waves, just a few months prior, had shredded two pilings below the boat hoist. Even the concrete ballast broke. Officials scrambled together $25,000 for emergency repair work to keep the pier open. Rehabilitating the entire structure would cost on the order of $5 million to $7 million, and even that might not be enough to withstand the ocean in the hotter years to come.

In his more than 50 years of research, Griggs has examined every kind of human defense against the sea and documented both their successes and their many failures. When people seek his guidance on confronting the water, he has no easy answers. There are only so many ways to separate the ocean from what we want to call land, he said. And the true cost of forcing an unmoving line in the sand is proving to be magnitudes more than what California seems willing to pay. People walk through a storm-damaged section of a seaside grouping of buildings with facades of different pastel colors

People walk through a storm-damaged section of Capitola, Calif., in January, after a series of storms blasted the state.

Just south of here, at Seacliff State Beach, an elaborate barricade built in 1926 was destroyed the very next winter and has since been rebuilt — and then damaged or destroyed — eight more times. The version in 1982 cost more than $1.5 million and lasted six weeks (it was designed to last 20 years). These cycles of wishful engineering and natural destruction have only continued to intensify. The observations Griggs jotted down on his walk, in fact, would become even more prescient than imagined. In less than three years’ time, barely a week into January 2023, huge swells, compounded by a series of record-breaking storms, would once again undermine the wall at Seacliff, pummel the Venetian condos and even tear Capitola’s wharf in two.

Griggs took another glance at all the plywood and sandbags in front of him and shook his head. Within just a few decades, Californians have managed to alter the shoreline in such a way that the realities of climate change seem unimaginably daunting. Collapsed buildings, flooded roads, shattered seawalls — all the problems that make the coast so fragile today are not by some fault of nature. A problem exists because our human-built world keeps getting in the way of the rising sea. But this current story of our coast does not have to end in disaster. We can choose to act, to reconsider, to determine a more sensible future. How we proceed can make all the difference, and it’s on all of us to forge a new ending. Stripes of color representing the rising temperatures in California between 1850 to 2020

There are only so many ways to face the rising sea. Seawalls are one option, but they come with hidden consequences. These hard-fought lines of defense force the sand before them to drown or wash away. For every new seawall protecting a home or a road, a beach for the people is sacrificed. Few issues today along the coast are as divisive and as misunderstood as seawalls, Griggs often explains. “All things being equal, responding to coastal erosion with a hard structure parallel to the shoreline is a decision or choice not to protect the beach at that location.”

Adding sand to disappearing beaches is another tactic. Dredges whir to life and idyllic coastlines from Santa Cruz to San Diego routinely turn into construction zones, with dump trucks and sand dozers pushing sediment for hours across the starving shore. This race against nature, however, lasts only so long as there’s money and enough sand. Elevating homes and roads is perhaps another option, but this, too, costs money — and requires reconfiguring entire communities in dramatic and unfamiliar ways.

Then there’s what scientists and economists and number-crunching consultants call “managed retreat”: move back, relocate, essentially cede the land to nature. These words alone have roiled the few cities and state agencies bold enough to utter them. Mayors have been ousted, planning documents rewritten, campaigns waged over the very thought of turning prime real estate back into dunes and wetlands. Many declared retreat un-American. To win, California must defend. Our climate change challenge

If the Golden State is going to lead the world toward a better, safer future, our political and business leaders — and the rest of us — will have to work harder to rewrite the California narrative. Here’s how we can push the state forward.

But at what cost? The California coast itself is a series of engineered landscapes — home today to almost 27 million people and all the ports, harbors and major cities that support a state that, if it were its own country, would be the fourth-largest economy in the world. There are limits, however, to this built environment, especially as the realities of sea-level rise force a more collective reckoning. Should California become one long wall of concrete against the ocean? Will there still be sandy beaches or surf breaks to cherish in the future, coastal road trips and oceanfront homes left to dream about? If business continues as usual and global temperatures continue to rise, more than $370 billion in property could be at risk of coastal flooding by the end of the century, the economic damage far more devastating than the state’s worst earthquakes and wildfires. Salt marshes — home to spawning fish, weary shorebirds and many of the world’s most endangered species — face complete extinction. Trapped between rising water on one side, pavement on the other, there’s little room left for these precious ecosystems. In just a few more decades, two-thirds of the beaches in Santa Barbara, Los Angeles, Orange County and San Diego — so deeply tied to the state’s heart and soul — could also be no more.

However you cut it, Griggs said, sacrifices lie ahead. In a world as finite as this one, every decision, big or seemingly small, is a choice to preserve one resource at the cost of another. So, when all that we treasure can no longer be saved, what becomes the priority? Stripes of color representing the rising temperatures in California between 1850 to 2020

Griggs still has to pinch himself sometimes, stunned by what he gets to do every day for a living. He’s often out examining the juts and crannies of the coast, usually with a binder of notes in hand. It still felt like winter that morning in March 2020 when he zipped up his Timberland vest, rolled up his sleeves, and went for a brisk walk to check out the shore. He had timed low tide just right at Capitola Beach, a flattened, manicured patch of sand along the mouth of Soquel Creek that is bookended by 90-foot cliffs. As the waves receded toward the fog-draped horizon, the water made room for a thin stretch of damp sand below the bluffs.

He walked past a red-lettered sign warning “DANGEROUS CLIFFS. Proceed at your own risk,” and hopped down to the wet, pebbled sand that had just emerged at low tide. He likes coming down here to see what new stories might be revealed in these ancient layers of rock. Inching his way toward the towering bluffs, Griggs explained how this area is a geologic microcosm of everything that could be possible on the coast. He paused at a large mound of broken sandstone and compacted mud. “This wasn’t here two weeks ago,” he said, craning his neck to see what section of the cliff must have collapsed. He pointed to a cavernous undercut that likely destabilized the bluff and noted the clusters of pampas grass, a fluffy, straw-colored weed that wedges its roots into the rocky cracks and joints. Whenever water makes its way into these cracks — from rain or big waves during high tide — the pressure builds until entire slabs of the cliff come crashing down.

He squatted down to take a closer look, brushing his hand over a slab of dark-gray mudrock embedded with a wallpaper-like print of white shells. These compacted layers of mollusk fossils always amaze his students, another humble reminder that everything California is standing and building on was underwater in a previous chapter of this planet’s history. He took a photo, then nudged aside another pile of sandstone. “Look,” he said, “these are all bone fragments. This one seems to be a piece of vertebra.”

Griggs stood up and took a mental assessment of the jumble of rocks. This is all part of nature’s process, he explained. The next high tide will sweep this huge pile of geological history into the ocean, where it will be ground down and eventually returned to the shore as fresh sand. Cliff erosion, and the occasional collapse, helps replenish beaches, but modern coastal living has disrupted this ancient process. Griggs motioned to the row of homes and apartment buildings at the top of the bluff: Engineers have tried all sorts of ways to hold back these cliffs, he said, but it’s not easy slowing down the forces of coastal erosion. “There used to be two rows of pine trees and a sidewalk with benches. It was called Lovers’ Lane. There were all these pictures of people sitting out there,” he said. “Well, the trees are gone, the path’s gone, the road’s gone.” Several homes have also had to move over the years — from earthquakes, from coastal erosion, sometimes both — but the people still living up there want to hold on to as much time as possible.

Time is funny like that. It can take tens of thousands of years to cycle through a geological epoch, just a couple of hundred for industrialization to make a mess of the planet, and only a decade or two to delude people into making decisions based on flawed time frames — whether it’s a 30-year mortgage or a political term that resets every four years. And in this moment when inconvenient realities like climate change have become so politicized, shortsighted individualism has further clouded our ability to plan ahead. We seem to have both no time and too much time to act, and so we spiral into paralyzing battles over the why, who, when and how.

Scientists by now have a fairly firm grasp of the geologic and climate pressures looming over the shore. What’s less predictable, Griggs said, is how people will choose to respond.

All this engineering, all this sacrifice: How many times will we try to overcome a force as vast as the sea? People spend years fighting to maintain a wishful line in the sand, yet a few extra feet of water here or there is hardly a shrug for the ocean. When you look at the coast with wise enough eyes, you can almost see the high-water lines of floods and disasters past ... lines foretelling the history we’re doomed to keep repeating, if we keep closing ourselves off to change.

Ask a Reporter: Inside the project

What: Times reporters Rosanna Xia and Sammy Roth will discuss “Our Climate Change Challenge” during a live streaming conversation. City Editor Maria L. LaGanga moderates.

When: Sept. 19 at 6 p.m. Pacific.

Where: This free event will be live streaming. Sign up on Eventbrite for watch links and to share your questions and comments.

latimes.com/2023-01-06/california-storms-wreak-havoc

https://lookout.co/santacruz/civic-life/story/2023-01-05/capitola-wharf-taking-a-beating-esplanade-taking-on-water

https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2023-06-05/amount-of-warming-triggering-carbon-dioxide-in-air-hits-new-peak-growing-at-near-record-fast-rate

https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-salt-marsh-climate-change-20180221-story.html

 

latimes.com

Stay out of the water.

Although Los Angeles County beaches managed to avoid significant damage from Tropical Storm Hilary, officials have warned beachgoers to avoid swimming, surfing and playing in ocean water due to unhealthy conditions.

The L.A. County Department of Public Health has issued an ocean water quality rain advisory until 9 a.m. on Thursday, and noted that the warning period could be extended depending on further showers.

It is common for bacteria levels in coastal waters to increase after storms, as rainfall flushes contaminants such as litter, trash, fertilizers, pet waste, metals and car fluids from streets into the ocean via rivers, creeks and storm drains. Bacteria levels typically remain high for at least 72 hours after a storm. The risk of illness is higher for children and the elderly.

On Monday afternoon, public officials were still assessing damage to county beaches and facilities. Despite the storm breaking daily rainfall records across the region, local beaches appear to have escaped serious damage, officials said.

“Overall, we made it through OK,” said Nicole Mooradian, public information specialist with the county’s Department of Beaches and Harbors, in an email. “We saw erosion at our most vulnerable beaches, but it could have been much worse.”

Crews saw significant erosion at Redondo Beach, around the storm drains, she said, as well as some erosion around a parking lot at Point Dume in Malibu. A restroom in Topanga Beach suffered some internal damage too.

A video captured by SkyCal on Monday morning released on CBS News showed storm damage near the Queen Mary in the Long Beach harbor, where pieces of a dock were destroyed. No boats appeared damaged, but large amounts of trash and storm runoff could be seen floating on the water.

In Santa Monica on Sunday, at least two large flows of street runoff some 15 yards wide rushed into the ocean, carrying trash and debris. In Marina del Rey, trash carried by stormwater flowed down Ballona Creek toward the ocean before city-maintained booms and a trash interceptor captured it.

Although large storms can affect drinking water quality, the county department of public health said it is not aware of any effects to local water systems. But it did advise homes or businesses supplied by private wells affected by flooding to look for debris and mud around the well. Visible damage to the well casing, a loose cap, and mud stains could indicate that water within the well and distribution system may be contaminated and affect drinking water quality.

“If well owners believe that their well has been contaminated, they should discontinue using their well water for drinking and cooking purposes and use only disinfected or bottled water and contact a qualified professional for service,” the county said in an email.

The tropical storm, the first to make landfall in Southern California in 84 years, broke daily rainfall records across the region. Los Angeles International Airport received 2.54 inches of rain and Long Beach Airport reported 2.62 inches, compared with their previous records of “a trace” of rain, weather service meteorologist Rich Thompson said. Culver City got 3.65 inches, Santa Monica 3.56, and the South Bay cities Redondo Beach and Hawthorne tallied 2.47 and 2.24 inches, respectively.

All state beaches in Orange and San Diego counties remained closed on Monday due to the storm.

http://publichealth.lacounty.gov/phcommon/public/eh/water_quality/beach_grades.cfm

http://publichealth.lacounty.gov/phcommon/public/eh/water_quality/beach_grades.cfm

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2023-08-21/hurricane-hilary-obliterated-daily-rainfall-records-across-souther-california

 

latimes.com

I’ve been to my fair share of live music performances, held everywhere from Radio City Music Hall to college dorm rooms. The first concert I saw was the Jonas Brothers in New York City’s Central Park (which 9-year-old me thought was totally epic). Still, I never predicted I’d find myself inside the dome of an iconic telescope, about to listen to a classical music concert.

Yet on a recent Sunday, there I was at the Mt. Wilson Observatory in the San Gabriel Mountains, awaiting the afternoon’s performers: the Zelter String Quartet.

“Be here now for these particular wavelengths of light and sound,” said Dan Kohne, a Mt. Wilson Institute board member, speaking to the audience from a makeshift stage on a deck in the dome. Just then, the steel walls of the dome slid apart, revealing the open sky. The audience ooh-ed and aah-ed as the dome began to slowly rotate and we watched the trees and clouds rolling past us.

On one Sunday each month, Mt. Wilson Observatory hosts a chamber music or jazz concert in the dome, which was founded in 1904 by the Carnegie Institution of Washington and designed by D.H. Burnham. The telescope housed inside it — the Hooker 100-inch telescope — was completed in 1917 and reigned as the world’s largest optical telescope until 1949. Famed astronomer Edwin Hubble used this very telescope to solve the long-debated spiral nebulae question by observing other galaxies to be separate from our own. When I entered the space, I was taken by the sheer size of the telescope, its peak reaching the top of the dome. Violinist Kyle Gilner grins while performing with the Zelter String Quartet.

Violinist Kyle Gilner grins while performing with the Zelter String Quartet.

The dome itself looks like a UFO that just touched down on Earth. Its stark white metal exterior feels downright extraterrestrial when juxtaposed with the trees and nature surrounding it.

The idea to host live music in the dome was born from a conversation in 2017 between Kohne and Cécilia Tsan, professional cellist and artistic director of the Mt. Wilson Observatory concerts. Kohne described the acoustics in the space as “extraordinary” and urged Tsan to bring in her cello to test it out. So she did. A Facebook video of Tsan playing a song in the dome received 39,000 views.

Kohne and Tsan decided to work together to take advantage of the unique acoustics and create a celebration of music and science.

“Both science and music let us journey into new worlds,” Tsan said.

At the concert, the seats were assembled in a semicircle facing the black-clad musicians: Carson Rick on viola, Allan Hon on cello and Gallia Kastner and Kyle Gilner on violin. A hush fell over the space as they began to play. They captivated the audience with their music, the instruments beautifully melding together and reverberating as one throughout the dome. With each swift move of their bows, the foursome took quick, synchronized breaths. The audience subtly swayed as they played music by Mendelsohn, Puccini and Todd Mason, often with their eyes closed and heads back, overcome with emotion and soaking in the echoing sounds.

I felt a sense of calm throughout the performance, combined with awe at the space itself and its ability to bring so many people together.

“Hearing the acoustics in the dome feels like you’re in direct contact with the universe,” Tsan said. “It’s soothing in a world that’s so chaotic right now.” A crowd enjoys the performance of a string quartet inside an observatory dome.

The Zeller String Quartet performs in the dome housing the 100-inch (2.5-meter) Hooker telescope at Mt. Wilson Observatory.

 

Sciencedaily.com

A paper recently published in Nature Energy based on pioneering research done at Illinois Institute of Technology reveals a promising breakthrough in green energy: an electrolyzer device capable of converting carbon dioxide into propane in a manner that is both scalable and economically viable.

As the United States races toward its target of net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, innovative methods to reduce the significant carbon dioxide emissions from electric power and industrial sectors are critical. Mohammad Asadi, assistant professor of chemical engineering at Illinois Tech, spearheaded this groundbreaking research.

"Making renewable chemical manufacturing is really important," says Asadi. "It's the best way to close the carbon cycle without losing the chemicals we currently use daily."

What sets Asadi's electrolyzer apart is its unique catalytic system. It uses inexpensive, readily available materials to produce tri-carbon molecules -- fundamental building blocks for fuels like propane, which is used for purposes ranging from home heating to aviation.

To ensure a deep understanding of the catalyst's operations, the team employed a combination of experimental and computational methods. This rigorous approach illuminated the crucial elements influencing the catalyst's reaction activity, selectivity, and stability.

A distinctive feature of this technology, lending to its commercial viability, is the implementation of a flow electrolyzer. This design permits continuous propane production, sidestepping the pitfalls of the more conventional batch processing methods.

"Designing and engineering this laboratory-scale flow electrolyzer prototype has demonstrated Illinois Tech's commitment to creating innovative technologies. Optimizing and scaling up this prototype will be an important step toward producing a sustainable, economically viable, and energy-efficient carbon capture and utilization process," says Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy Program Director Jack Lewnard.

This innovation is not Asadi's first venture into sustainable energy. He previously adapted a version of this catalyst to produce ethanol by harnessing carbon dioxide from industrial waste gas. Recognizing the potential of the green propane technology, Asadi has collaborated with global propane distributor SHV Energy to further scale and disseminate the system.

"This is an exciting development which opens up a new e-fuel pathway to on-purpose propane production for the benefit of global users of this essential fuel," says Keith Simons, head of research and development for sustainable fuels at SHV Energy.

Illinois Tech Duchossois Leadership Professor and Professor of Physics Carlo Segre, University of Pennsylvania Professor of Materials Science and Engineering Andrew Rappe, and University of Illinois Chicago Professor Reza Shahbazian-Yassar contributed to this work. Mohammadreza Esmaeilirad (Ph.D. CHE '22) was a lead author on the paper.

 

latimes.com

It was a week of robotaxi mayhem in San Francisco for the Cruise driverless car company — by turns bizarre, comic and alarming.

As a result, the California Department of Motor Vehicles said Friday it’s investigating “recent concerning incidents” involving Cruise vehicles while tapping the brakes on the company’s ambitious expansion plans.

The DMV didn’t say which incidents it’s probing, but over a seven-day period the events included:

— The bizarre, when a group of Cruise robotaxis drove together into the city’s North Beach district on the night of Aug. 11, froze in place, sat for 15 minutes blocking an intersection, then drove on. Cruise blamed cellphone service.

— The comic, when a Cruise robotaxi ignored construction signs on Tuesday and headed into a stretch of cement. Stuck in the wet muck, it was removed later by workers dispatched by Cruise.

— The alarming, when a Cruise robotaxi entered an intersection on a green light even as a fast-moving fire truck, lights flashing and siren blaring, approached. The truck struck the car, occupied by one passenger, who was transported to a hospital. Cruise said the passenger sustained “what we believe are non-severe injuries.”

The day after the injury crash, the DMV announced its investigation and said Cruise agreed to halve the size of its fleet, to 50 robotaxis during the day and 150 at night. In a prepared statement, Cruise said it looks forward to working with the DMV and posted its version of events online.

The company plans to populate the city with thousands of robotaxis. Another company, Waymo, has similar plans. Cruise is owned by General Motors, Waymo by Alphabet, parent company of Google.

The DMV did not say how long its investigation might take. Another DMV investigation, into whether Tesla falsely advertises its driver-assist technology as “Full Self-Driving,” has been ongoing for two years and three months.

The latest robotaxi incidents occurred on the heels of a controversial California Public Utilities Commission vote Aug. 10 to approve massive expansion of robotaxis in San Francisco.

State legislators are becoming fed up with the state of driverless vehicle regulation in California. A bill is moving through the Legislature that would require human safety drivers in driverless trucks for at least the next five years. State Sen. Lena Gonzalez has expressed concern about the way the DMV regulates Tesla safety.

DMV Director Steve Gordon, a former Silicon Valley executive, was appointed to the post by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Meantime, city officials in San Francisco, Los Angeles and Santa Monica and elsewhere are frustrated at how little control they have over robotaxi deployment in their cities.

The CPUC voted 3-1 to approve robotaxi expansion. The no vote was cast by Genevieve Shiroma, who said she was not against robotaxis but that it made sense to solve safety issues such as interference with emergency vehicles before expansion is approved.

Voting in favor of expansion was John Reynolds, whose previous job was that of top lawyer at Cruise.

All five members of the CPUC were appointed by Newsom. Newsom’s office declined to comment.

latimes/2023-08-12/cruise-robotaxis-come-to-a-standstill forbes.com/sites/bradtempleton/2023/08/17/cruise-robotaxi-drives-into-wet-concrete abc7news.cruise-driverless-car-sffd-fire-truck-accident theverge/2023/8/18/23837217/cruise-robotaxi-driverless-crash-fire-truck-san-francisco https://getcruise.com/news/blog/2023/further-update-on-emergency-vehicle-collision/ latimes.com/2022-05-26/dmv-tesla-year-long-slow-walk latimes/2023-06-01/driverless-trucks-california-dmv-mistrust-safety-regulations latimes.com/2023-08-10/cpuc-vote-on-robotaxi cpuc.ca.gov/about-cpuc/commissioner-john-reynolds

 

www.vox.com

Guatemala is on the verge of electing Bernardo Arévalo, a former academic and diplomat whose campaign has focused on fighting corruption, giving many graft-weary Guatemalans hope that building strong democratic institutions could be possible in the Central American nation.

Arévalo’s Movimiento Semilla (Seed Movement in English) pulled out a surprise win in first-round elections in June and will face off against conservative establishment leader and former First Lady Sandra Torres on Sunday. But Arévalo’s path to the presidency has been fraught, as establishment politicians used the court system to disqualify or challenge anti-establishment candidates.

Indigenous leader Thelma Cabrera, businessman Carlos Pineda, and Roberto Arzú were all barred from running in June’s contest by the Constitutional Court, Guatemala’s high court. Prosecutor Rafael Curruchiche began investigating Movimiento Semilla in July, just before the June elections were certified, claiming that some 5,000 of the signatures on a petition to form the party were fake.

Guatemala’s Supreme Judicial Court granted an indefinite injunction against the effort to bar Arévalo from running, but the decision could still be appealed to the Constitutional Court. And the injunction hasn’t stopped Torres from launching specious attacks against Arévalo, including that Movimiento Semilla is trying to steal the elections and that Arévalo will make Guatemala a Communist country.

Arévalo’s support has remained significant, and the court’s decision to allow Movimiento Semilla a place in Sunday’s elections have brought cautious optimism to Guatemalans and observers alike. Arévalo, the son of the nation’s first democratic president Juan José Arévalo, was raised abroad after a military coup overthrew his father’s successor. He was polling at 61 percent as of Wednesday, compared to Torres’s 31 percent, according to Fundación Libertad y Desarrollo, an independent think tank focused on Latin America.

Torres is the head of the Unidad Nacional de la Esperanza (UNE) party, which has long been entrenched in Guatemalan politics, including, reportedly, the less savory side, like trading votes in congress for favors and jobs. This is Torres’s third bid for the presidency, after failed efforts in 2015 and 2019, and over the years she has more closely aligned with outgoing President Alejandro Giammattei, according to InSight Crime, an investigative outlet reporting on issues in Latin America.

Arévalo’s message is powerful in a deeply corrupt nation

Torres’s coziness with the political establishment, both as a legislator and as a confidant of the unpopular Giammattei, signaled that a Torres presidency would be much the same as Giammattei’s. In a country with unstable democratic institutions — a situation aided by US meddling in Guatemalan politics under progressive leftist President Jacobo Arbenz — as well as serious inequality and violence, Arévalo’s success seems like a revelation.

In the first round of elections, Semilla was the underdog; Torres was widely expected to be a frontrunner, as was Zury Ríos, a populist legislator and the daughter of General Efraín Ríos Montt, a right-wing military dictator who took over Guatemala in a 1982 coup. Many Guatemalans were also expected to avoid voting to protest the corruption in the process.

But Semilla and Arévalo — upstarts offering Guatemala the chance to “vote different” — resonated with voters for reasons beyond Arévalo’s political pedigree, primarily because of his message that corruption would not be tolerated under his watch.

Guatemala suffers from the serious, interconnected problems of violence, inequality, and government corruption. Powerful interests, and especially business interests, can easily persuade the government to cater to their demands — increasing inequality and setting up the government as a mechanism for enrichment.

There was, starting in 2007, an attempt to address Guatemala’s corrupt politics under the Comisión Internacional Contra la Impunidad en Guatemala, or CICIG, which confronted and prosecuted criminal organizations as well as corruption in the government, as Vox previously reported:

Under CICIG, Guatemalan prosecutors were tasked with investigating crime at the highest levels, even bringing corruption charges against a former president and vice president, among others. It was enormously successful, providing a model for other Latin American countries where similar problems — state capture, organized crime, and graft — have been allowed to flourish with impunity.

Former President Jimmy Morales, himself dogged by accusations of corruption, refused to renew CICIG’s mandate in 2019. CICIG’s efforts were already under attack by corrupt and powerful forces within the country; under Morales and Giammattei, anti-corruption judges and officials have fled Guatemala following arrests and threats of prosecution.

Arévalo has made tackling corruption the centerpiece of his campaign, particularly speaking out against CACIF, the Coordinating Committee of Agricultural, Commercial, Industrial, and Financial Associations, which in June he accused of “underpinning the economy of privilege” — defined in Arévalo’s words as “the economy in which the success of a group or company depends on the level of contact or political clout it has with a powerful politician, with a minister.”

But his anti-graft message, as well as his clear-eyed view of what’s possible given powerful and antagonistic interests, has resonated in urban areas and, increasingly, smaller towns as well.

Arévalo faces obstacles, even if he wins

Guatemala’s democracy is young; it has a strong, entrenched history of dictatorship, civil war, and corrupt and weak institutions which are extremely difficult to overcome, especially in just one presidential term — the limit under Guatemala’s constitution.

Inequality and poor social services, a struggling economy, and a legacy of violence following a 36-year civil war and violent dictatorships have allowed multiple armed groups to terrorize Guatemalan society. Those groups, according to InSight Crime, comprise street gangs like MS-13 and Barrio 18, but also involve former and current police officers, as well as members of the military and intelligence officers. The groups mostly engage in illegal drug smuggling, but also “human trafficking, kidnapping, extortion, money laundering, arms smuggling, adoption rings,” and other illegal businesses.

They are also entrenched in the government, with connections to powerful people “ranging from local politicians to high-level security and government officials,” Insight Crime reports.

Even if he wins, Arévalo could face renewed calls for prosecution or attempts to overturn the election, even after the results are posted. But in a Friday interview with El País, he remained positive that his ideals would win out.

“We believe that democratic institutions must be reestablished,” Arévalo said. “We have to re-found the process that this corrupt political class has hijacked from us.”

Many links in article

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by badbrainstorm@lemmy.world to c/california@lemmy.world
 

I was gonna submit a pull request, but I see they say no new feature request rn with big changes coming.

Just wanting to throw out there my wish for a new feature.

I like the current ability to switch from video to audio, so would like that to stay the same

But I'd love to be able to set it to a default codec option for each.

It's a pain to have to always have to switch it to those free as in freedom codecs everytime

 

latimes.com

In 2021, our team at UC Merced found that covering California’s extensive network of irrigation canals with solar panels could make significant contributions to both clean energy and water conservation, serving two of the state’s most pressing needs at once.

In addition to the added solar power, we found that shading all 4,000 miles of the state’s canals and aqueducts could save as much as 63 billion gallons of water annually by reducing evaporation — enough to irrigate 50,000 acres of farmland or provide water to the homes of more than 2 million people.

Now we have a chance to put those projections to the test. Last year, we joined the California Department of Water Resources, the San Joaquin Valley’s Turlock Irrigation District and the firm Solar AquaGrid to build the nation’s first such project and assess the feasibility of covering canals across the state. The pilot, known as Project Nexus, is being funded by the state and is expected to be up and running over two canal sections spanning about 1.6 miles as of next year.

Such solar canopies have been suggested for years in the United States to no avail. The California Department of Water Resources and the Federal Bureau of Reclamation found that previous designs would hinder normal canal maintenance and operation.

Until now, the chief examples were steel-truss systems in India that, while appropriate for infrastructure there, could not readily be adapted to California’s major canals. It’s only recently that we’ve identified lighter-weight, less expensive and more flexible cable suspension designs that we think will work across California and the western United States. Solar panels covering the Narmada canal near Ahmadabad, India.

Solar panels covering the Narmada canal near Ahmadabad, India. New designs for use on California’s canals are lighter and more flexible.

More promising technologies are emerging and in need of testing. With $25 million in funding for the idea included in the Inflation Reduction Act, the Bureau of Reclamation has an opportunity to reconsider its original assessment in light of new technologies.

One challenge facing this idea is that water resources in California and across the United States were developed piece by piece, not as an integrated system. And while the Turlock Irrigation District provides both water and electricity, the two resources are not combined in many other places.

For many canal owners and operators, adding electricity means additional responsibilities and costs alongside the longer-term benefits. Water districts working to maintain their infrastructure and capacity in a changing climate may not see generating renewable energy as a high priority. We hope Project Nexus will begin to address this issue.

Another challenge relates to measuring all the benefits of projects that allow existing utility corridors to do double and triple duty. For the Turlock district, for example, building solar over canals avoids repurposing productive agricultural or natural lands for energy production. An important part of our research is developing a cost analysis that considers all the economic, environmental and social benefits of the system.

Solar over federal canals and aqueducts could likewise help the Bureau of Reclamation meet targets for renewable energy development on public lands, reducing pressure on sensitive ecosystems, wildlife habitat and other valuable assets.

Accelerating these projects will require more investment in prototypes to evaluate additional designs, including floating solar over moving water. State and federal policymakers will also have to do more to encourage water districts to engage in the transition to clean energy. The Turlock Irrigation District was motivated partly by California’s mandate to generate 60% of its power from renewable resources by 2030.

We have a collective opportunity to speed the transition from fossil fuels while making our vast water system more valuable and efficient, simultaneously advancing two of the most important goals we have. We urgently need more such systematic thinking and integrated responses to our changing climate reality.

Brandi McKuin is a project scientist with the Sierra Nevada Research Institute at UC Merced. Roger Bales is a distinguished professor of engineering and management at UC Merced.

 

laist.com

With less than a month to go before hundreds of tenants must leave, an L.A. Superior Court judge has denied a request to postpone evictions at Barrington Plaza.

Tuesday’s decision will allow real estate investment company Douglas Emmett, which owns the building, to proceed with mass evictions at the 712-unit high-rise apartment complex in West Los Angeles.

The Barrington Plaza Tenant Association had sought a preliminary injunction to stop evictions from moving forward until the court reaches a decision in their lawsuit alleging that Santa Monica-based Douglas Emmett is abusing the state’s Ellis Act.

That law allows landlords to remove tenants in order to exit the rental business, but Douglas Emmett previously told LAist it plans to continue renting out Barrington Plaza after installing fire sprinklers.

“We are grateful to the court for this quick decision,” said Eric Rose, a spokesperson for Douglas Emmett in an email following the ruling. “We are not surprised that Judge Chalfant has denied the preliminary injunction motion requested by the Barrington Plaza Tenants Association, as we are in compliance with the Ellis Act and California State law.”

The Barrington Plaza Tenant Association did not immediately respond to LAist’s request for comment on the decision. Hundreds face eviction

The situation at Barrington Plaza represents one of the city’s largest-ever mass evictions. Hundreds of residents are now scrambling to find housing in an expensive rental market with tight tenant screening and a severe shortage of affordable homes.

Douglas Emmett notified tenants in May that they must move out by Sept. 5, unless they qualify for a one-year extension due to age or disability. Under the city’s rent stabilization ordinance (RSO), the landlord is required to pay relocation assistance and Douglas Emmett says it has set aside $7.5 million for that purpose.

L.A. Superior Court Judge James Chalfant wrote in his decision that facing eviction poses significant harm to tenants. “However, these harms are undermined by their adequate legal remedies under the Ellis Act and RSO and the fact that they will have to move out of their units anyway,” he wrote.

Chalfant went on to say Douglas Emmett would be economically harmed by the court stalling the company’s renovation plans. “The balance of hardships favors the landlord,” he wrote. Tenants suspect a ploy ‘to raise the rents’

For long-term tenants like Miki Goral, losing their housing feels like an injustice.

“I think they want to get people out of a rent-controlled building and be able to raise the rents,” said Goral, who moved into Barrington Plaza 34 years ago. “They are trying to set an example for other landlords throughout the city, that they can do the same kind of thing.”

Goral doesn’t own a car, and she likes living at Barrington Plaza because she can easily take a bus to her job as a UCLA librarian. She’s hoping to stay in the same area, but apartments in her neighborhood now rent for about $500 more per month than what she currently pays.

“I know I'll have to pay more,” she said.

For now, Goral has some time to find a new place. Because she’s over the age of 62, she qualified for a one-year extension. Unlike other tenants facing a Sept. 5 move-out, she’ll have until May 8, 2024. Can repairs happen without evictions?

Like dozens of other high-rise apartment buildings constructed in L.A. between 1943 and 1974, Barrington Plaza lacks fire sprinklers because city code did not require them at that time.

Two major fires have broken out at the property over the last decade, the most recent of which resulted in the death of one resident.

In a court filing opposing any delays in eviction, lawyers for Douglas Emmett wrote, “Barrington Plaza will remain off the rental market for the next several years while the buildings undergo life safety improvements — a good thing for the safety and security of whatever future use is made of the buildings in light of two tragic fires that occurred on-site in the last ten years.”

Tenants believe the company could install fire sprinklers without forcing hundreds of people out of their homes. They say Douglas Emmett can use the city’s Tenant Habitability Program to proceed with repairs while maintaining tenancies.

Links https://laist.com/news/housing-homelessness/barrington-plaza-eviction-lawsuit-douglas-emmett-los-angeles-housing-ellis-act

https://laist.com/news/housing-homelessness/barrington-plaza-fire-sprinklers-eviction-ellis-act-los-angeles-housing-relocation

https://laist.com/news/housing-homelessness/los-angeles-la-renter-tenant-screening-credit-score-check-landlord-voucher-income-housing-apartments-bonin-ramn-city-council-rental-access-ordinance

https://laist.com/news/politics/la-loses-much-more-affordable-housing-than-it-gains

https://www.kpcc.org/2014-02-12/should-la-put-sprinklers-in-high-rise-apartments-a

https://laist.com/news/barrington-plaza-fire-death

https://housing.lacity.org/rental-property-owners/tenant-habitability-program

 

nbclosangeles.com

The California Natural Resources Agency (CNRA) established a Tribal Nature-Based Solutions Program as part of the agency’s commitment to fighting climate change and fostering partnerships with California Native American tribes.

The $101 million grant program is the first of its kind and was established on July 31 with the support of Gov. Gavin Newsom, according to a press release.

Tribal nature-based solutions are “projects that work with and enhance nature to address societal challenges,” including equity, the climate crisis and biodiversity, CNRA Deputy Secretary for Tribal Affairs Geneva E. B. Thompson said.

She gave an example solution that traditional agricultural practices allow for healthy soil that retains more carbon. By providing tribes funding to promote cultural practices of cultivation, tribal members will benefit from traditional foods while creating healthier soil, plants and animals, Thompson said.

“Supporting tribes in doing what they do best benefits all Californians because we know tribes are bringing that deep place-based knowledge to restoring the lands,” Thompson said.

Other potential project ideas can be found in the state’s Natural and Working Lands Climate Smart Strategy and Pathways to 30x30 Strategy.

The CNRA spoke with more than 70 different tribes about the development of those two programs, Thompson said.

“I'm really proud of the fact that we were able to integrate so many tribal priorities throughout those two strategies,” she said, adding that those conversations set “a great framework for how the state thinks about partnering with tribes in implementation of nature-based solutions.”

Chairperson Thomas Tortez from the Torres Martinez Desert Cahuilla Indians with a member of the California Conservation Corps during a native planting event near the Salton Sea in December 2021. Photo by California Conservation Corps.

Native Americans and California

Local

Get Los Angeles's latest local news on crime, entertainment, weather, schools, COVID, cost of living and more. Here's your go-to source for today's LA news.

California is home to more people of Native American heritage than any other US state, and there are currently 109 federally recognized tribes in the state.

“Due to a lot of international, federal, and state policies, we have a long history of historical wrongs committed against California Native Americans,” Thompson said.

In the late 19th century, the federal government removed Native American children from their families and forced them to attend boarding schools that were government-funded and often ran by churches to make them assimilate to American culture.

More than one-half of California residents and their descendants who identify as Native American were forced to relocate their homes to large urban areas as part of the federal government’s termination policy. In 1953, Congress began disbanding tribes and selling their land.

Many of these historical efforts to erase the traditions and beliefs of Native Americans has been considered a cultural genocide, and the legacies of these policies “are still being felt today,” Thompson said.

Native Americans and Alaskan Natives have a life expectancy 5.5 years less than the rest of the country. They also face disproportionate rates of disease burden, poverty and poor educational outcomes.

How to apply for funding

Newsom announced the allocation of $100 million for the program at a California Truth and Health Council meeting in March 2022. The California Ocean Protection Council issued $1 million to a Tribal Small Grants Program.

$25 million of the funding will go to time-sensitive projects, and the deadline to apply for this funding is Aug. 28. For all other projects, preliminary applications are due Sept. 29 and full proposals are due Feb. 6, 2024.

The CNRA is currently accepting applications. People can apply by filling out a preliminary project proposal application form. Next, applicants will develop a project proposal, and if the proposal is accepted, the CNRA will conduct a field visit or applicants will present their project. Finally, applicants will submit documentation proving they will be able to carry out their projects.

The CNRA is currently creating a Tribal Nature-Based Solutions Technical Expert Panel to review applications for the program. The agency hosts virtual office hours every Friday to support people applying.

“It's not solving all the world's problems, but the hope is that it's identifying those truths, and then providing the resources, collaboration and partnership with tribes to work towards addressing the everyday realities that tribes and native communities are facing,” she said.

Links: https://resources.ca.gov/Newsroom/Page-Content/News-List/California-Launches-Grant-Program-to-Support-California-Native-American-Tribes

resources.ca.gov/Newsroom/Page-Content/News-List/California-Launches-Grant-Program-to-Support-California-Native-American-Tribes

https://e360.yale.edu/features/how-native-tribes-are-taking-the-lead-on-planning-for-climate-change

resources.ca.gov/-/media/CNRA-Website/Files/Initiatives/Expanding-Nature-Based-Solutions/CNRA-Report-2022---Final_Accessible.pdf

https://www.californianature.ca.gov/

https://www.courts.ca.gov/3066.htm#:~:text=California's%20Indian%20Tribes&text=How%20many%20California%20tribes%20are,lands%20that%20cross%20state%20boundaries.

https://boardingschoolhealing.org/education/us-indian-boarding-school-history/#:~:text=There%20were%20more%20than%20350,they%20spoke%20their%20native%20languages.

https://www.courts.ca.gov/3066.htm#:~:text=California's%20Indian%20Tribes&text=How%20many%20California%20tribes%20are,lands%20that%20cross%20state%20boundaries.

https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/indian-relocation.html

https://web.archive.org/web/20070608052514/http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/native_voices/voices_display.cfm?id=96

https://library.law.howard.edu/civilrightshistory/indigenous/termination

https://eji.org/news/history-racial-injustice-cultural-genocide/

https://www.ihs.gov/newsroom/factsheets/disparities/

https://www.ihs.gov/newsroom/factsheets/disparities/

https://www.nicoa.org/elder-resources/health-disparities/#:~:text=Native%20people%20residing%20in%20poor,%2C%20accident%2C%20and%20injury%20rates.

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