Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Brown orders California's first mandatory water restrictions: 'It's a different world'

Brown orders California's first mandatory water restrictions

 '

It's a different world'


Gov. Jerry Brown, standing on a patch of brown grass in the Sierra Nevada that is usually covered with several feet of snow at this time of year, on Wednesday announced the first mandatory water restrictions in California history.
"It's a different world," he said. "We have to act differently."
Brown was on hand Wednesday as state officials took stock of historically abysmal levels of snowpack in the Sierra Nevada amid the state's grinding drought.
Brown ordered the California Water Resources Control Board to implement mandatory restrictions to reduce water usage by 25%. The water savings are expected to amount to 1.5 million acre-feet of water over the next nine months.
Other elements of Brown's order would:

--Require golf courses, cemeteries and other large landscaped spaces to reduce water consumption. 
--Replace 50 million square feet of lawn statewide with drought-tolerant landscaping as part of a partnership with local governments.
--Create a statewide rebate program to replace old appliances with more water- and energy-efficient ones.
--Require new homes to have water-efficient drip irrigation if developers want to use potable water for landscaping.
--Ban the watering of ornamental grass on public street medians.
--Call on water agencies to implement new pricing models that discourage excessive water use.
--Require agricultural to report more water usage information to the state so that regulators can better find waste and improper activities.
--Create a mechanism to enforce requirements that water districts report usage numbers to the state.

"It is such an unprecedented lack of snow," said Frank Gehrke, chief of the California Cooperative Snow Survey Program. He's been attending the snowpack measurements since 1987 and said he had never before seen the ground barren of snow on April 1. "It's way below the records."
It's another foreboding sign for a state languishing in drought as the wet season winds to a close.
Electronic readings on Wednesday at about 100 stations across the Sierra showed that the water content of the snow was only about 5% of the state average for April 1, the date on which snowpack is normally considered at its peak. Official manual readings will be announced Wednesday afternoon.

Early data show the snowpack is lower than any year since 1950, when record keeping began. Never before has the amount of water in the snow on April 1 dipped lower than 25% of the historical average for that day.
Snowpack accounts for about 30% of the state's water supply. Other sources, including reservoirs and rainfall totals, have recently improved. Still, officials from the Department of Water Resources say the state of the snowpack, which melts and replenishes California's reservoirs, means there will be virtually no runoff this spring or summer when the rain stops and temperatures rise. 
“This is sort of uncharted territory,” said department spokesman Doug Carlson, calling the situation "dismal." 
State water officials on Wednesday made their fourth manual snow survey this year at Phillips Station, about 90 miles east of Sacramento. Carlson said he visited the area a few days ago.
DOCUMENT: Gov. Jerry Brown's executive order on drought“I can tell you what the reading will be tomorrow: zero, as in Sierra Nada,” he said. The station traditionally averages more than 60 inches of snow on April 1, he said.
The snow levels in the Sierra have declined each month since manual surveying began on Dec. 30. That initial electronic reading showed that the snow’s water content was 50% of normal for the date. A month later, the water content was down to 25% of average, and in March, it was only 19%.
“It does leave questions about where the water will come from,” Carlson said. “Will there be enough of it? It will probably have to come from groundwater again … and that brings in a whole other set of problems and complications since the groundwater seems to be over-tapped.” 

Relatively meager rainfall combined with unusually warm weather has limited this season's snowfall, officials said.
At the eight stations in the northern Sierra where the Department of Water Resources measures precipitation, about 32 inches of rain -- 76% of average -- has fallen since the water year began in October.
Sacramento has seen temperatures as much as 6 degrees above normal each month for the past 15 months, a National Weather Service spokesman said.
The rest of the state’s water picture, though, doesn’t look as dreary.
Major storms that hit California in December and February were warm, and fell as rain rather than snow. Though precipitation is below the state’s historical average, the northern Sierra stations have already gotten more rain since October than during all of the 2013-14 water year, which lasts from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30. 
That rain has helped refill the state’s reservoirs. As of Monday, Lake Oroville — the keystone reservoir of the California State Water Project, which delivers water from Northern California to the south — was at 51% of its capacity, compared with 49% a year ago. Lake Shasta, the state’s largest reservoir, had about 150 billion gallons more water in it Monday than it did a year ago.
In early March, state officials also announced that customers of the State Water Project will get 20% of their contract requests, compared with only 5% in 2014.
But Central Valley farmers without senior water rights are likely to get no supplies from the valley's big federal irrigation project for the second year in a row. And in April, the Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, which imports supplies from Northern California and the Colorado River, is expected to consider rationing regional water deliveries, as it did during the 2007-09 drought. That decision will have a ripple effect throughout the Southland as local agencies react, probably by increasing water rates and adopting stricter conservation measures.
In a first step toward bolstering such measures, the State Water Resources Control Board beefed up its emergency drought regulations this month, directing urban agencies to limit the number of days residents can water their yards.
The board also warned that it would impose tougher restrictions in coming months if local agencies don't ramp up conservation efforts.





At the time, board Chairwoman Felicia Marcus called the state's minuscule snowpack “just terrifying.”
“We are not seeing the level of stepping up and ringing the alarm bells that the situation warrants,” Marcus said.
Brown and lawmakers have responded to the drought with new legislation, including a $1-billion plan the governor signed last week.
It includes $127.8 million for food and water supplies and immediate measures to protect the environment from the effects of the drought. Most of the funding is for long-term projects such as recycling sewage water, improving water treatment facilities and supporting desalination plants.

TIME OUT FROM ALL THE STRESS - ENJOY!!


TIME OUT FROM ALL THE STRESS

ENJOY!!!




CAN YOU HEAR ME NOW? 
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(wish I had some peanut butter and jam!)
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Multi-dexterous father!
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Just ONE more and I'd have a dozen!
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She's coming home!
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One shade lighter on the lipstick for a match!
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How do I hug a hedgehog?
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A guy's gotta eat what he can get!
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I still say he's not my kid! (but I love him anyway)
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I'm warning you! I'll hang a peckin' on you!
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Tea time Mum! Welcome to my party!
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The Three Amigos!
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Babusha in the making.
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He's MY guy - You got something to say about it??
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Come on you two! I need my space!
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This quilt definitely won't blow away, we got it covered!
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Ya know, at times like this I wish we could fly!
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Next-generation GMOs: Pink pineapples and purple tomatoes

Next-generation GMOs: Pink pineapples and purple tomatoes

Posted: Apr 01, 2015 5:18 AM PDTUpdated: Apr 01, 2015 5:18 AM PDT
 
This image provided by The John Innes Centre, UK, shows a salad made with red and purple tomatoes.(AP Photo/Andrew Davis, The John Innes Centre, UK)
This image provided by The John Innes Centre, UK, shows a salad made with red and purple tomatoes.(AP Photo/Andrew Davis, The John Innes Centre, UK)
By MARY CLARE JALONICK
WASHINGTON (AP) - Cancer-fighting pink pineapples, heart-healthy purple tomatoes and less fatty vegetable oils may someday be on grocery shelves alongside more traditional products.
These genetically engineered foods could receive government approval in the coming years, following the OK given recently given to apples that don't brown and potatoes that don't bruise.
The companies and scientists that have created these foods are hoping that customers will be attracted to the health benefits and convenience and overlook any concerns about genetic engineering.
"I think once people see more of the benefits they will become more accepting of the technology," says Michael Firko, who oversees the Agriculture Department's regulation of genetically modified organisms, or GMOs.
Critics aren't so sure. They say there should be more thorough regulation of modified foods, which are grown from seeds engineered in labs, and have called for mandatory labeling of those foods. The Agriculture Department has the authority to oversee plant health of GMOs, and seeking Food and Drug Administration's safety approval is generally voluntary.
"Many of these things can be done through traditional breeding," says Doug Gurian-Sherman of the advocacy group Center for Food Safety. "There needs to be skepticism."
What could be coming next? Del Monte has engineered a pink pineapple that includes lycopene, an antioxidant compound that gives tomatoes their red color and may have a role in preventing cancer. USDA has approved importation of the pineapple, which would be grown only outside of the United States; it is pending FDA approval. A small British company is planning to apply for U.S. permission to produce and sell purple tomatoes that have high levels of anthocyanins, compounds found in blueberries that some studies show lower the risk of cardiovascular disease and cancer. FDA would have to approve any health claims used to sell the products.
Seed giants Monsanto and Dow AgroSciences are separately developing modified soybean, canola and sunflower oils with fewer saturated fats and more Omega-3 fatty acids. The Florida citrus company Southern Gardens is using a spinach gene to develop genetically engineered orange trees that could potentially resist citrus greening disease, which is devastating the Florida orange crop. Okanagan Specialty Fruits Inc., the company that created the non-browning apples, is also looking at genetically engineering peaches, cherries and apples to resist disease and improve quality.
A few genetically engineered fruits and vegetables are already available in grocery stores: Hawaiian papaya, some zucchini and squash, and a small amount of the sweet corn we eat, for example. But the bulk of the nation's genetically engineered crops are corn and soybeans that are eaten by livestock or made into popular processed food ingredients like corn starch, soybean oil or high fructose corn syrup.
The engineered corn and soybeans have faced resistance from environmental groups and some consumers who are wary of the technology, saying not enough is known about it. While science has so far shown that genetically engineered foods are safe, the groups have called for the labeling so consumers know what they are eating. According to a December Associated Press-GfK poll, two-thirds of Americans favor those labels.
Facing that concern, companies developing the new products say their strategy for winning over consumers is to harness the increased interest in healthy eating.
"This is a new wave of crops that have both grower benefits and consumer benefits," says Doug Cole of J.R. Simplot, the company that developed the potatoes. Many modified types of corn and soybeans are engineered to resist herbicides, a benefit for growers trying to control weeds but of little use for the consumer.
Simplot's potatoes are engineered to have fewer black spots, a benefit not only for farmers seeking higher yields but also for consumers who wouldn't have to soak them before preparation.
British scientist Cathie Martin has developed the modified purple tomatoes and hopes to eventually sell them as a juice in the United States. She says some of those same health-conscious consumers that have concerns over GMOs should be attracted to a product with potential to help lower the risk of cancer.
"This product has been designed to be good for them," Martin says.
Retailers are still uncertain. McDonald's buys Simplot's conventional potato products, but said the company does not have "current plans" to source any GMO potatoes. Other retail chains have already pledged not to sell a genetically engineered salmon that is pending approval at the Food and Drug Administration.
Cathleen Enright of the Biotechnology Industry Organization says the industry worries that opposition from advocacy groups will slow development.
"At the end of the day, the marketplace is going to determine what is going to succeed," Enright said.
___

US Currently Considering Who (IN THE US) To Kill Next - SO WHAT'S NEW?!



US CURRENTLY CONSIDERING WHO TO KILL NEXT!!!
THE CRIMINAL 'CABAL' IS NOT DEAD!
ARE YOU PREPARED FOR ANOTHER 'FALSE FLAG' ON US SOIL - SOON??



Dr. William Mount
Mon Mar 30, 2015 16:37

As you read this, under your feet in South Central Nebraska there is a committee meeting trying to decide who to kill next - what terrorist attack they should conduct.

Picture this - a bunch of Fat Old Men sitting around sipping Scotch and smoking cigars discussing what terrorist attack they should fund next. Well - that is exactly what is happening as someone from the CIA and White House listen in.

The Nuclear War is set to go off 6 April with 12 Nukes going off 3 April and several Presidential Double being killed a few days earlier - like Obama (Arrow or Gun) and Putin and Li.
The attack sill be done by either a "Muslim Extremist" or a "US Veteran Bible Packing Gun Owning Constitutionalist who believes in the truth."

Proposals being considered as you read this:

1) Cut the cable on a Cable Car in San Francisco during Rush Hour Traffic in the afternoon

2) Dirty Bomb in Calcutta to force India into the Anti-Terrorist Crap.

3) Yes - a Scotch Plant Explodes - how sac-religious.

4) Commercial Airliner crashed into wither the White House or the Kremlin - yes - the church.

5) A Japanese Destroyed Torpedoes by a Russian Submarine - or, that sounds Juicy.

6) The US Destroyer to be torpedoed by the Chinese Submarine is still a go off of the Indian Coast.

7) A bomb in a Portland Mall by a White Vet Extremist.

8) Taking down the US Grid with a Mock Sun-Spot created by a huge Air burst Nuke (60MGT) and then throwing a Virus into the Electrical Grid to destroy it.

9) Blowing Hoover Dam with charges already placed at the base of the dam.

10) Earthquake NYC - no, to many underground caves and rail lines.

11) School Shooting in either Missouri or Michigan because the Governor's are completely paid off. This would, of course, be fake like most of their school shootings.

12) Caribbean Cruz Terrorist Attack sinking the Cruz Ship - off the coast of Grenada.

Shall I go on?

Their minds are an open book to me -- this is Pure Evil YOU fund with your Tax Paying Dollars.
This is really going on as you read this.

They cooked up 9/11 and Fukushima 3/11 and the coming terrorist attack on Japan on 5/11.

Unbelievable but true.

This is our United States Corporation. These people at the top are sick and evil beyond belief -they kill for fun and joke about it and they have million on their pay role they can use to do this with.


Un-Frikn-Belivable but true.

Their minds are so black, so Evil, and YOUR tax dollars pay for this.

Please pray for that is all we have left - GOD.
----------
The News You Need

Dr William B. Mount

http://disc.yourwebapps.com/discussion.cgi?id=149495;article=154063




Attempts to Undermine Democracies by Present Day Fifth Columnists


Attempts to Undermine Democracies by Present Day Fifth Columnists

NORTH AMERICA HAARP REPORT AS OF MARCH 31 2015



HAARP NORTH AMERICA

Status Control








 See more at: http://www.haarpstatusnetwork.com/#sthash.iHcGrtra.dpuf

Just a thought on Jade Helm... By Freewill

I am reflecting back on the days when I used to listen to Drake on the conference calls years ago. What if (and I mean a big "if") Jade Helm is actually a double edge sword? What if troops are actually going to clear out the bankrupt corporate UNITED STATES foreign agent employees from each and every level of corporate U.S. offices all the way down to township level? What if the troops are actually following the lawful civilian authority issued orders of the De Jure Republic? Most troops are awake and oppose the tyranny and do believe in upholding their oaths.

Now I am just pondering thoughts here and not looking for any criticism, just throwing a thought out to all of you for opinions of the possibility.

~Freewill