Showing posts with label Areas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Areas. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Cops want you to stop crime by hanging out in sketchy areas

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Cops want you to stop crime by hanging out in sketchy areas

Monday, March 31, 2014

Exclusive: Syrian forces trying to secure border areas in Idlib province

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


Log Files


Like many other Web sites, Not Just The News makes use of log files. The information inside the log files includes internet protocol (IP) addresses, type of browser, Internet Service Provider (ISP), date/time stamp, referring/exit pages, and number of clicks to analyze trends, administer the site, track user"s movement around the site, and gather demographic information. IP addresses, and other such information are not linked to any information that is personally identifiable.


Cookies and Web Beacons


Not Just The News does use cookies to store information about visitors preferences, record user-specific information on which pages the user access or visit, customize Web page content based on visitors browser type or other information that the visitor sends via their browser.


DoubleClick DART Cookie


  • Google, as a third party vendor, uses cookies to serve ads on Not Just The News.

  • Google"s use of the DART cookie enables it to serve ads to users based on their visit to Not Just The News and other sites on the Internet.

  • Users may opt out of the use of the DART cookie by visiting the Google ad and content network privacy policy at the following URL - http://www.google.com/privacy_ads.html.

These third-party ad servers or ad networks use technology to the advertisements and links that appear on Not Just The News send directly to your browsers. They automatically receive your IP address when this occurs. Other technologies ( such as cookies, JavaScript, or Web Beacons ) may also be used by the third-party ad networks to measure the effectiveness of their advertisements and / or to personalize the advertising content that you see.


Not Just The News has no access to or control over these cookies that are used by third-party advertisers.


You should consult the respective privacy policies of these third-party ad servers for more detailed information on their practices as well as for instructions about how to opt-out of certain practices. Not Just The News"s privacy policy does not apply to, and we cannot control the activities of, such other advertisers or web sites.


If you wish to disable cookies, you may do so through your individual browser options. More detailed information about cookie management with specific web browsers can be found at the browser"s respective websites.



Exclusive: Syrian forces trying to secure border areas in Idlib province

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Flood-hit areas in for "long haul"






























David Cameron: Repairs will take time



More wet weather is affecting flood-stricken parts of the UK, with severe flood warnings in place along the Thames and in Somerset.


Fourteen severe flood warnings are in place in Berkshire and Surrey, and two in Somerset.


Prime Minister David Cameron said the floods were a “huge challenge” and “we are in it for a long haul”.


A total of 1,600 troops are available to help, with some drafted in to help flood-hit parts of southern England.


Mr Cameron, speaking while on a visit to Dawlish, Devon, where a stretch of railway was washed away in the floods, said: “The government will do everything it can to co-ordinate the nation’s resources; if money needs to be spent it will be spent, if resources are required we will provide them, if the military can help they will be there.


“We must do everything, but it is going to take time to put these things right.”


Mr Cameron will later hold a press conference at Downing Street.


He later tweeted: “After a day visiting flood-hit areas, I’ll update the country on the latest plan of action with a press conference at No10 at 4:45pm.”


About 1,000 homes have been evacuated along the Thames after towns and villages, including Chertsey, Wraysbury and Datchet, were flooded.


Thousands more properties are still at risk. However, some residents have chosen to stay in their homes.


In the Tewkesbury area, in Gloucestershire water levels are expected to rise by a further 30cm (12in) and levels will stay elevated in parts of the county for “some time”, the Environment Agency said.


More than 5,000 properties have been flooded in the last two months after the “most exceptional period of rainfall” to hit parts of England and Wales for nearly 250 years.


Flood levels have also affected Ironbridge in Shropshire as the River Severn continues to rise.


And more than 130 severe flood warnings – indicating a threat to life – have been issued since December.


In other developments:


  • More than 100 homes have so far been flooded in Worcestershire

  • Snowfall has affected travel in some parts of Wales, with heavy rain and coastal gales forecast.

  • Coastal communities in Wales face being abandoned as rising sea levels mean the cost of maintaining defences can no longer be justified

  • Telford and Wrekin Council has issued a statement warning residents that the water levels have created a “serious situation”

  • Surrey Police say they have been inundated with 999 calls

  • Specialist marine police officers along with two boats from the Metropolitan Police are in Weybridge and Chertsey to help

As well as there being 16 severe flood warnings the Environment Agency has also issued about 350 less serious flood warnings and alerts, mostly in southern England and the Midlands.


The Met Office has severe weather warnings in place for rain across parts of south Wales and south-west England, cautioning that “with ongoing flooding in some places, any further rain will only add to the problems”.


BBC weather forecaster Laura Gilchrist said Wednesday could bring the strongest wind so far this winter with an amber warning – meaning “be prepared” and “possible gusts of 80mph or more in exposed areas” areas of the South West.


Residents have told of their homes being flooded and having to move out.


Alice Paice said flood water was up to her waist on the ground floor of her home in Sunbury, Middlesex.


“We have no heating, only an electric heater and the fireplace. Yesterday the water pump went. We can run limited water, but we have no shower or washing machine,” she said.


Georgia Fletcher, who lives in Wraysbury, Berkshire, has been forced to move out of her home although it is on higher ground.


She said: “It’s distressing not being able to get back to your own house. My bedroom is on the ground floor. You don’t know what you’re going to come back to.”









Latest UK weather forecast from the BBC’s John Hammond



Alanna Burns, from Chertsey in Surrey, said while water levels were still rising, there were not enough officials around and no sandbags.


She said people had been left like “sitting ducks waiting for it to happen”.


On the trains, because of flooding near Maidenhead, trains are having to run at a reduced speed between London Paddington and Reading, with journey times extended by up to an hour.


First Great Western is currently advising passengers not to travel.


Services are also suspended on South West Trains between Staines and Windsor and Eton Riverside due to rising water levels, and the main train line from London to Cornwall remains severed at Dawlish, in Devon.



‘No finger pointing’

Earlier Defence Secretary Philip Hammond told the BBC the government had got a “grip” on the crisis and everything was being done to help those affected.


Mr Hammond, who is a also MP for Runnymede and Weybridge, said the military had been called in, extra money given and equipment brought in, some cases from abroad.


“The assets that are needed from across the nation have been mobilised into the areas affected.”









Aerial footage shows the extent of flooding along the Thames



Asked about Environment Agency Chairman Lord Smith, who has faced criticism for not doing enough to help those affected, he said: “I don’t want to spend the time now in the middle of this crisis recriminating and finger pointing.”


Mr Cameron also would not be drawn into criticism of ministers over the crisis.


He said: “Everybody needs to get on with the vital work of bringing all of the nation’s resources to get our road and rail moving, to help people who have been flooded, to plan for the future and to learn all the lessons of the very difficult situation we are in.”



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Flood-hit areas in for "long haul"

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Providing Health Care Complicated in Rural Areas


Health insurance policies that fit the requirements of the Affordable Care Act are a tough sell in many parts of rural America.


From Florida to Idaho, Michigan and beyond, many people in the most rural areas are reluctant to sign up for plans offered on the government’s healthcare website.


Those tasked with spreading the word there about the healthcare overhaul say their efforts are complicated by a lack of providers in rural areas, the distances they must cover to reach potential enrollees, anti-government attitudes and technology issues.


Though many people in rural areas have signed up for the plans, others say health insurance is too expensive and they would rather face the annual tax penalty than comply with the new law.


In Freeport, Fla, a  rural part of the Panhandle, Christopher Mitchell finds few takers when he delivers his message about the importance of exploring insurance options under Obamacare.


People in the conservative-leaning area tend to have a bad impression of President Barack Obama’s signature law because of negative messages they hear on talk radio or from friends, said Mitchell, marketing director for a network of nonprofit health clinics. Even for those with insurance, a doctor’s visit may require a long drive because there are few providers in the area — and some are selective about the coverage they accept.


Around the country, advocates spreading the word about Obamacare in rural areas face similar difficulties. Coupled with the well-publicized glitches for the online insurance marketplaces, their stories illustrate the broader challenges in meeting President Barack Obama’s goal of reducing the number of uninsured in places with some of the highest percentages of uninsured residents.


“I tell people that I am not here to advocate for the law, I am here to support the law and empower people to be able to use and understand the law,” said Mitchell, whose employer, PanCare of Florida, received a federal grant for outreach efforts. “But when people are hearing over and over and over that is bankrupting America, it is hard to break through.”


On a recent afternoon, Mitchell made his pitch to half a dozen patients in the waiting room of a low-slung brick clinic surrounded by pine trees on the two-lane state road that serves as Freeport’s main street. In areas like this — where one-story houses and mobile homes sit far apart on lots of tan, sandy soil and pine needles — many poor residents could benefit from federally subsidized health insurance but aren’t open to it.


Among those unconvinced by Mitchell’s pitch was Laressa Bowness, who brought her father to the clinic for dental care.


“I get frustrated because I hear so much stuff. The politicians who put the system into place have lost their sense of reality. They don’t understand what people who work face,” said Bowness, who added that most people she knows don’t have health insurance because they simply cannot afford it.


In a sparsely populated area of Michigan, retired nurse Sue Cook crisscrosses the 960-square mile Sanilac County to help people sign up for insurance through the online exchange. The spread-out county has only 42,000 residents.


“There are many challenges we’re facing right now,” said Cook, who leads an all-volunteer team of health care professionals at Caring Hearts Clinic in Marlette, 65 miles north of Detroit. “You’ve got somebody in the northeast part of the county that has no transportation to get here to even sign up.


“We’re finding that even if I go to the far end of the county, there’s the issue of not having Wi-Fi to hook up to,” she said. “Those are huge hurdles for us to try to conquer in a large county like this.”


Kathy Bannister recently signed up with Cook’s help after many failed attempts. The self-employed beautician secured a plan from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan with a monthly payment of $ 215 after subsidies. She now pays $ 500 for a comparable plan from the same insurer.


“The whole idea was to make it easier for people,” said Bannister, 51, who had a heart-valve replacement 13 years ago. “I’d been calling and calling and calling, and a lot of people would have given up. It’s discouraging.”


To the north, Nick Derusha is director of the health department for four Upper Peninsula counties with a high rate of uninsured residents: Mackinac, Luce, Alger and Schoolcraft. The region covers a vast expanse but only consists of about 35,000 people.


Barriers faced by people in the area include a shortage of health workers, a lack of transportation and Internet and cable connectivity.


“There are many barriers to care, as well as health care coverage alone,” Derusha said.


Rudey Ballard, an insurance broker in Rexburg, Idaho — population 25,000 — has been selling health care policies for two decades. In addition to his brokerage downtown, his six-person office staffs a small kiosk at the local Wal-Mart, just down the hill from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints temple that dominates the rural skyline.


Rexburg is Republican country — all local lawmakers are GOP, and residents voted overwhelmingly for presidential candidate Mitt Romney in 2012. Ballard sometimes finds himself the target of criticism when he’s manning the Wal-Mart booth.


“I’ve actually had people come up to me and boo me,” he said. “They come up to me and go ‘Boo, hiss. Boo, hiss. I will never sign up that.’”


Back in Florida, Mitchell had no takers during his afternoon of trying to get people to sign up. Some in the small waiting room told him that even with federal subsidies they would face a choice between utilities, food, gas or monthly health insurance. One woman asked Mitchell about the fine for not having health insurance. She laughed and said the $ 95 is much more affordable than a monthly health insurance bill.


Walton County, with about 58,000 residents, stretches from the Gulf of Mexico in the south to the Alabama border in the north. While there are wealthy neighborhoods along the coast, most of the county looks more like Freeport. For the ZIP code surrounding the town, census data shows that the median household income is around $ 43,000 and the poverty rate is around 12 percent.


Because Florida opted not to take additional funding from the federal government to expand Medicaid coverage, many people who would qualify for Medicaid under the federal guidelines do not qualify under the state’s guidelines. People can appeal their Medicaid eligibility and seek help in reducing insurance premiums, but that doesn’t always work.


Florida Blue, the state’s Blue Cross Blue Shield network, is the only insurer providing coverage in all of the state’s 76 counties. Kevin Riley, the company’s vice president, said serving rural Florida can be a challenge.


“It is tough in part because of the distances people have to drive in those large, rural counties to reach providers,” Riley said.


The company has held town-hall style meetings throughout the state and has sent representatives to Wal-Marts in rural areas to discuss coverage with customers.


“There are two or three counties that only have one hospital and is a difficult piece,” he said.


Walton County residents have 13 plans to choose from under the Affordable Care Act with monthly premiums ranging from $ 232 to $ 402 and deductibles from $ 850 to $ 12,700 for a 40-year-old male, according to information from Florida Blue.


The county has seven to 12 physicians for every 10,000 residents, but the vast majority of doctors is in the southern part of the county, according to a study by the Florida Department of Health. The leaves residents of rural areas north of Interstate 10 with a long drive to reach providers. Florida as a whole averages 22 physicians for every 10,000 residents, according to the 2012 study.


Part of PanCare’s strategy is employing people like Joe Manning, a lifelong resident of the Panhandle who knows many people in the small towns in Walton County.


Manning said the key to finding coverage in rural Florida seems to be patience and a willingness to fill out all of the forms that might help someone get a reduction in premiums. But a mistrust of both government and technology can complicate things.


“You have to be willing to go through the whole process,” he said. “Some people walk away as soon as you start asking them to put their personal information in the computer. They do not trust the government with that information.”


___


Associated Press writers Jeff Karoub in Detroit and John Miller in Boise, Idaho, contributed to this report.


© Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




Newsmax – America



Providing Health Care Complicated in Rural Areas

Saturday, September 28, 2013

US Navy Blimp Conducting Aerial Mapping Over Areas Surrounding DC


Fox Baltimore
September 28, 2013


The US Naval Research Laboratory has been conducting aerial mapping operations with a blimp over the areas surrounding Washington DC since Saturday, September 21. The aerial mapping will cease on Oct. 5.


The blimp, a US Navy MZ-3A, has been operating under special approval of the US FAA and the TSA. The aerial mapping will be conducted within the Washington D.C. Flight Restriction Zone (DCA-FRZ) at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service in Beltsville, Md., at U.S. Army Fort Belvoir in Fairfax, Va. and within the DCA-Special Flight Restrictions Area. At times the blimp will travel the region to the north to Frederick Municipal Airport in Maryland and to the southwest near Culpepper, Va.


The MZ-3A is government-owned and operated by contractor Integrated Systems Solutions, Inc.


The 178-foot MZ-3A blimp can travel at a top speed just under 50 knots and can remain aloft and nearly stationary for more than twelve hours.


This article was posted: Saturday, September 28, 2013 at 4:44 am









Prison Planet.com



US Navy Blimp Conducting Aerial Mapping Over Areas Surrounding DC

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Fire"s Threat To Bay Area"s Water Supply May Come Later





A charred caution sign just outside of California’s Yosemite National Park.



David McNew /Reuters/Landov



A charred caution sign just outside of California’s Yosemite National Park.


David McNew /Reuters/Landov



The huge “Rim Fire” in and around California’s Yosemite National Park hasn’t yet caused problems at the Hetch Hetchy Reservoir that provides water to 2.6 million people in the Bay Area. There have been fears that falling ash will pollute the water there.


But now, the San Francisco Chronicle reports, “wildfire experts say problems for San Francisco’s water agency may come later. Hetch Hetchy’s pristine waters will be vulnerable to eroding hillsides as the fire leaves behind torched soil that can’t absorb autumn rains and leveled forests that no longer anchor steep mountain slopes.”


There’s also word from KQED Wednesday morning that the flames are “perilously close to a longstanding experimental forest near Sonora. Losing it would be a setback for forestry and as fate would have it, fire management. For 80 years, the Stanislaus-Tuolumne Experimental Forest has been a trove of data for foresters.”


Southern California Public Radio, which has been updating an online “Fire Tracker” with data about blazes in the state, continues to add information about the Rim Fire here. As of 7:45 a.m. ET Wednesday, it was reporting that the fire was 20 percent contained and had burned 184,481 acres.


KQED, meanwhile, has posted a graphic produced by the federal government’s InciWeb that offers a colorful look at the Rim Fire’s growth since the blaze broke out on Aug. 17.


In case you missed it, this post we published on Tuesday is still worth checking out: “STUNNING VIDEO: Pilots’ View Of California’s Rim Fire.”




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Fire"s Threat To Bay Area"s Water Supply May Come Later