
Tuesday, January 02, 2018
R U F*cKkN Kidding Me? Clean Air? Make More???
Maricopa County's Initiative to Promote Cleaner Air and Healthier Lives
Let's get serious (and outraged) here, folks > Neither ADEQ nor Maricopa County is doing enough to fulfill their mission: FAILURE: the air we breathe is dangerous to health.
This region consistently violates federal clean air standards year-after-year. It's getting worse, not better. A so-called "educational outreach initiative" just does not even take the first pro-active action necessary to deal with this problem.
Please demand action to hold officials accountable by submitting comments to this website - http://cleanairmakemore.com/
All nine PM-2.5 monitors across the Phoenix Valley exceed the Federal Health Standard yesterday. One monitor (West Phoenix) came in with an AQI of 249 (199.3ug/m3) which is "Very Unhealthy." This is also the highest PM-2.5 value we have recorded on New Year's Day since our current network records began in 2005.
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The Arizona Department of Environmental Quality (ADEQ) is issuing a High Pollution Advisory (HPA) for Jan. 2, 2018, for fine particulate matter (PM2.5), also known as soot, for Maricopa County, Arizona. This HPA is due to particle pollutant levels expected to accumulate enough to exceed the federal health standard for PM2.5.
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About Clean Air Make More
Clean Air Make More is an educational outreach initiative created to inform Maricopa County residents about air pollution challenges we face in the county and provide them with the tools they need to take action. Created by the Maricopa County Air Quality Department and funded through fines collected from air quality violations, the primary focus of Clean Air Make More is to reduce the number of days this region exceeds the federal health standard for air pollution. This site will provide you with information on the air quality forecast, current restrictions, no burn day restrictions, air quality news, upcoming events and ways to reduce air pollution.
Sunday, December 31, 2017
A Knock-Out 2017: Pie's End-of-The-Year Review
-Don't miss this one!
Published on Dec 31, 2017
Views: 25,288
Pie has a look at some of 2017s biggest stories.
*** Anonymous >This will Change Everything You Know...***
Published on Dec 31, 2017
Views: 4,008
This will Change Everything You Know 2018-2019 EVENTS WORLD NEWS
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Interactive Map: MEGA REGIONS /An Economic Geography of The United States
What if we drew the map of the United States based on how people actually live?
An Economic Geography of the United States: From Commutes to Megaregions
http://discovery.dartmouth.edu/megaregions/
Instead of dividing the country up into the familiar outlines of states, this map shows what the U.S. might look like if we based our regions on the pattern which commuters weave every day between cities, suburbs, and rural areas.
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An Economic Geography of the United States: From Commutes to Megaregions
http://discovery.dartmouth.edu/megaregions/
Instead of dividing the country up into the familiar outlines of states, this map shows what the U.S. might look like if we based our regions on the pattern which commuters weave every day between cities, suburbs, and rural areas.
More than 4 million lines on this map show the direction and volume of commuter flows. The white borders show a new geography of megaregions based on an algorithmic detection of related communities.
Zoom in and out to explore the map.
Click on the regions to learn their new names.
Use the layer control in the upper right corner to turn on City Labels if you need help orienting yourself.
Right click on a spot to see the commutes coming and going from that place.
Can you find where you live in this new geography of the U.S.?
This visualization was designed by Garrett Dash Nelson (Dartmouth College) and Alasdair Rae (University of Sheffield) based on research published in the journal PLoS One as “From Commutes to Megaregions: A New Economic Geography of the US.”
Garrett Dash Nelson Contributed equally to this work with: Garrett Dash Nelson, Alasdair Rae
Affiliation Department of Geography and Society of Fellows, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, United States of America
Contributed equally to this work with: Garrett Dash Nelson, Alasdair Rae
* E-mail: a.j.rae@sheffield.ac.uk
Affiliation Department of Urban Studies and Planning, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom
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