Tag Archives: florida

Gulf Oil Spill Update: Just the Facts

“How much oil is still gushing? No one knows exactly how much oil is escaping BP's oil collection system (series of pipes drawing oil from leak to surface ships) and entering Gulf waters. Government estimates peg the leak at 35,000 to 60,000 barrels per day, which translates to between 1.5 million and 2.5 million gallons. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)'s nearshore trajectory predictions for the spill show it hovering off the Gulf Coast as far west as the Rockefeller State Wildlife Preserve and Game Refuge in the western part of Louisiana. The oil slick stretches as far east as Port St. Joe in northwestern Florida. NOAA is no longer forecasting the movement of oil out at sea, but the slick is not currently expected to enter the Loop Current, which could draw it around the Florida Peninsula and into the greater Atlantic. However, giant plumes of oil and gas are still present thousands of feet below the surface of the Gulf. The plumes are made of a mixture of oil, gas and seawater. They've been spotted radiating out from the blown well in all directions, University of Georgia marine scientist Samantha Joye said at a June 22 media briefing. The southwest plume has been traced over 20 miles from the well, while another plume extends more than 30 miles (48 kilometers) to the Northeast. The plumes are rich in methane gas, which is an energy source for some undersea microbes. These microbes seem to be noshing on the methane and multiplying, depleting the oxygen in the water column. In the long run, Joye said, that oxygen deprivation could affect the Gulf ecosystem by harming populations of plankton, the base of the oceanic food chain. (READ THAT LAST SENTENCE AGAIN!) How many animals have been affected by the spill? Gulf wildlife is still facing fallout from the oil spill. According to NOAA, 583 sea turtles were stranded in the oil spill area between April 30 and June 28. Of those, 432 were found dead and four died after being rescued. A total of 136 turtles are currently in rehabilitation centers, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is coordinating an effort to remove up to 70,000 turtle eggs from at-risk beaches. [Animals affected by oil spill] In the same April-to-June time period, 55 dolphins were found stranded in the oil spill area. Only two survived. While cause of death has not been determined, dolphin strandings are up this year, according to NOAA. According to U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and NOAA numbers, 1,185 visibly oiled birds had been pulled from Gulf waters and beaches as of June 29. More than 300 of those were found dead, as were another 829 without external evidence of oil. ” More at link! http://www.livescience.com/environment/gulf-oil-spill-update-100702.html added by: DeliaTheArtist

Oil Spill and the SE Florida Reef System; What’s at stake?

On April 25, 2010, just five days after the BP Deep Horizon oil rig exploded, Reef Check, The Perry Institute for Marine Science and Ocean Rehab Initiative Inc. responded to protect threatened critical wetland ecosystems. Collaboratively, these institutions of marine research and conservation developed the Pre-Oil Volunteer Survey, whose methodology is now widely used across the Gulf of Mexico and Greater Caribbean by groups including USGS, USCG, NOAA, EPA, DEP, The Audubon Society, The Nature Conservancy, Surfrider Foundation and others. Scientists agreed that the survey methodology must be easy to teach and understand, be at little or no cost to perform, and provide real and significant results for science. In fact, you may even own most of the equipment needed for the survey, like a camera, GPS, tape measure, magic marker and plastic cards. To date, hundreds of volunteers have surveyed critical habitats for oil-threatened species in their native wetlands (estuaries, sea grasses, mangroves, lagoons, rivers, inlets, reefs and beaches) along South Florida, from the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary to Indian River County. Just this week, teams surveyed reefs in Palm Beach and Martin County, and were pleased to discover a healthy reef system. Residents up and down the coast have volunteered their time to aid during the largest environmental catastrophe in U.S. history. Current and future volunteers are not only divers, but come from all backgrounds: children, elderly, activists, government employees, retired and working citizens. To support conservation efforts and learn more about the methodology and volunteer opportunities in Florida, contact William via email at www.oceanrehab.org or call 561-308-8848. added by: OceanRehabWilliam

Judd Apatow Working On Pee-Wee Herman Movie

‘Superbad’ boss will produce as-yet-untitled project starring and co-written by Pee-wee creator Paul Reubens. By Gil Kaufman Judd Apatow Photo: Michael Tran/FilmMagic In a perverse match made in movie-dude heaven, “Superbad” boss Judd Apatow is developing an as-yet-untitled Pee-wee Herman movie that will find the bow-tie-wearing ageless man-child going on a road trip built around a “gigantic adventure.” According to Variety , Apatow will produce, but not direct, the movie, which is being written by Pee-wee creator Paul Reubens along with “Inglorious Basterds” scriptwriter Paul Rust. “Let’s face it, the world needs more Pee-wee Herman,” Apatow told the magazine. “I am so excited to be working with Paul Reubens — who is an extraordinary and groundbreaking actor and writer. It’s so great to watch him return with such relevance.” The unlikely pair hooked up after Apatow attended one of Reubens’ recent string of “Pee-wee Herman Show” revival gigs in Los Angeles. After decades on the shelf, Reubens dusted off the show for a rabidly received run in January and February that also led to an upcoming 10-week booking on Broadway starting October 26. Reubens, who has sparingly rolled out the high-water Pee-wee gray suit and bowtie over the past 20 years in the wake of a 1991 arrest for indecent exposure at an adult theater in Florida, has slowly been making his way back into acting over the past decade. He’s made a number of cameos over the years, including spots on “Reno 911!” and a bit in the Raconteurs’ “Steady as She Goes” video, as well as stints on “30 Rock,” “Dirt,” “Chowder” and “Tim and Eric Awesome Show, Great Job!” “There is no one like Judd in our business — he loves comedy with emotion and heart, and he sees what we do as art,” said Reubens, whose big-screen debut in “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure” was handled by none other than “Alice in Wonderland” director Tim Burton in his feature directing debut. “I can’t believe I’m getting this opportunity to be working with him.” It will be the first Pee-wee big-screen adventure since 1988’s sequel, “Big Top Pee-wee.” As if the Apatow-Reubens collabo isn’t enough for freaks and geeks to get excited about, Variety also reported that IFC is going to air two of Apatow’s early series, “Freaks and Geeks” and “Undeclared,” with “Freaks” — featuring then-little-known actors James Franco, Seth Rogen, Jason Segel and Linda Cardellini — slated to start rolling out on Friday (July 2) and “Undeclared” slated for the fall, complete with unaired episodes. For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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Judd Apatow Working On Pee-Wee Herman Movie

Female school Teacher Sentenced For Being Sexual Predator

[IMG] http://i46.tinypic.com/2iuytxd.jpg [/IMG] A judge in Tampa, Florida, on Monday sentenced Stephanie Ragusa, a former middle school math teacher, to 10 years in prison for having sex with two underage students in 2008. “As parents, we place our trust in teachers to provide a safe environment in which our children can learn,” Hillsborough County Circuit Judge Chet Tharpe said in handing down the sentence. “You violated that trust in the worst imaginable way.” Tharpe also sentenced Ragusa to 15 years of sex offender probation following her prison time. Ragusa, 31, pleaded guilty in April to three counts of lewd and lascivious battery in a March 2008 case involving a 14-year-old boy, and two counts of having unlawful sex with a minor in an April 2008 case involving a 16-year-old student. Ragusa has been in jail since she was arrested in 2008 leaving one of the victims' homes.Monday's sentencing included testimony from the victims' families, who depicted Ragusa as a sexual predator who caused severe emotional distress for their “Miss Ragusa maliciously and intently preyed on my son and the other boys,” said the mother of the 14-year-old victim. “She had access to their charts as far as their emotional behaviors. … I feel that she was very conniving … in picking these boys out and preying on them and using that to manipulate them and seduce them.” Prosecutor Rita Peters also… for full story click here http://www.waneenterprises.com/news/502 Did she get off light ?? added by: Wizzane

20 States plan to copy Arizona immigration law

Arizona's sweeping new immigration law doesn't even take effect until next month, but lawmakers in nearly 20 other states are already clamoring to follow in its footsteps. Gubernatorial candidates in Florida and Minnesota are singing the law's praises, as are some lawmakers in other states far from the Mexico border such as Idaho and Nebraska. But states also are watching legal challenges to the new law, and whether boycotts over it will harm Arizona's economy. The law, set to take effect July 29, requires police to check the immigration status of anyone they think is in the country illegally. Violators face up to six months in jail and $2,500 in fines, in addition to federal deportation. http://www.thonline.com/article.cfm?id=287398 added by: ibrake4rappers13

BP’s Next Disaster

Rolling Stone's Tim Dickinson reports that BP plans to start drilling in the Arctic this fall — and what the Obama administration is doing to stop it. On June 15th, as BP's catastrophic spill in the Gulf neared its third month, President Obama addressed the nation from the Oval Office. His administration, he assured the American people, would not let such a disaster happen again. He had put an indefinite hold on plans to open up new coastal areas, including Florida and Virginia, to offshore exploration. And he had frozen all new permits to drill in deep waters for six months, to give a blue-ribbon commission time to study the disaster. “We need better regulations, better safety standards and better enforcement,” the president insisted. But Obama's tough-guy act offers no guarantee that oil giants like BP won't be permitted to repeat the same mistakes that led to the nightmare in the Gulf. Indeed, top environmentalists warn, the suspension of drilling appears to be little more than a stalling tactic designed to let public anger over BP's spill subside before giving Big Oil the go-ahead to drill in an area that has long been off-limits: the Arctic Ocean. The administration has approved plans by both BP and Shell Oil to drill a total of 11 exploratory wells in the Chukchi and Beaufort Seas above Alaska — waters far more remote and hostile than the Gulf. Shell's operations could proceed as soon as the president's suspension expires in January. And thanks to an odd twist in its rig design, BP's drilling in the Arctic is on track to get the green light as soon as this fall. “The administration seems to want to avoid just shutting down these leases, even though they have every legal right to,” says Charles Clusen, who leads the Alaska project for the Natural Resources Defense Council. “My fear is that people will start to forget about the Gulf spill, and the government will give Shell permits next year. We'll have had a pause, but not enough to assess the resources at risk or to develop technology that would be truly safe.” Ken Salazar, the Interior secretary whose staff allowed BP to drill in the Gulf based on pro-industry rules cooked up during the Bush years, has made no secret of his determination to push the “frontier” of oil drilling into the Arctic. The region's untapped waters are believed to hold as much as 27 billion barrels of oil — an amount that would rival some of the largest oil fields in the Middle East. “Everything I've heard internally, from sources within both the administration and industry, tells me that the administration is all over wanting these guys out in the Arctic Ocean,” says Rick Steiner, a top marine scientist in Alaska who helped guide the response to the Exxon Valdez spill. “They're trying to solve this political problem with this Gulf spill in time to get these guys out in the Arctic next summer.” The White House dismisses any accusation of stalling as “not accurate,” noting that Shell's permits are “on hold” until the president's commission finishes its work. But an administration spokesman admits that BP's plan — which uses an unproven approach to extracting undersea oil — is not covered by the six-month moratorium on offshore drilling. This fall, the company plans to begin drilling for oil near Prudhoe Bay via an oil rig it created by building an island — a glorified mound of gravel — three miles out in state waters. Because the island rig is connected to the mainland by a causeway, BP and Interior agree that the “onshore” facility is not subject to restrictions on “offshore” drilling. It's the same kind of legal fiction that states like Indiana use to permit gambling on “riverboat” casinos that are permanently docked on dry land. Here's what BP has in store for the Arctic: First, the company will drill two miles beneath its tiny island, which it has christened “Liberty.” Then, in an ingenious twist, it will drill sideways for another six to eight miles, until it reaches an offshore reservoir estimated to hold 105 million barrels of oil. This would be the longest “extended reach” well ever attempted, and the effort has required BP to push drilling technology beyond its proven limits. As the most powerful “land-based” oil rig ever built, Liberty requires special pipe to withstand the 105,000 foot-pounds of torque — the equivalent of 50 Mack truck engines — needed to turn the drill. “This is about as sexy as it gets,” a top BP official boasted to reporters in 2008. BP, a repeat felon subject to record fines for its willful safety violations, calls the project “one of its biggest challenges to date” — an engineering task made even more dangerous by plans to operate year-round in what the company itself admits is “some of the harshest weather on Earth.” MORE at the link: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/17390/120130?RS_show_page=0 added by: Incredulous

University of Florida’s Entry At Solar Decathlon Mixes Old Ideas, New Technology

Images from University of Florida, from site or via designboom We always say that one of the ways we can design new buildings to use a lot less energy is to design them like old buildings, that Everything New is Old Again , particularly when it comes to getting rid of air condition… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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University of Florida’s Entry At Solar Decathlon Mixes Old Ideas, New Technology

Oil blankets Pensacola Beach

PHOTO: Kevin Reed’s dad taught him to swim at Pensacola Beach. It’s here that he taught his own son. “This will never be the same,” he says. PENSACOLA BEACH, FLORIDA The tide came in Tuesday night, under a moon almost full, and when the sun came up and the water retreated there it was: a broken band of oil about 5 feet wide and 8 miles long. It looked like tobacco spit and smelled foreign, and it pooled in yesterday's footprints as far as you could see. State officials called it the worst show of crude on shore from the gusher 120 miles away. As word spread, the people of Pensacola Beach walked to the black band to take a look, to take photographs, to be sure this wasn't some apocalyptic dream. They poured over the dunes all day, on pilgrimages to bear witness. Here came Courtney Laczko, 16, who has been coming to the beach almost every morning since school let out because she knew the days were numbered “It's actually really here,” she kept saying. She thought about the dolphins and how she used to pretend they were a happy little family. She thought about the time her mom wasn't working and she took the kids to the beach every day. “It was always the prettiest beach around here. You can't say that anymore.” Here came Kathy Allen, 15, a native. She thought about that night in November, after the homecoming dance, when a boy named Dakota leaned in and kissed her lips, her first ever, and how the stars seemed so bright and sparkly. Here came Stef Ackerman, 22, who learned to fish here and surf here. He walked to the oil and squatted and ran his finger up under his sunglasses. He thought about all those journeys to the beach with his dad to watch the Blue Angels zing down the shoreline and about that fishing trip when his older brother came home from war. How they talked and fished all day. This? He doesn't know how to process it. “I don't know what to do,” he said. “I don't know if anybody knows what to do.” Four buses of cleanup men showed up. Bulldozers rolled onto the white sand. Men with shovels scooped black onto plastic sheets and fed them to the dozers. Gov. Charlie Crist came, too, with his people, to the same beach where a week ago he walked and talked with President Barack Obama. He was expecting scattered tar balls, not this. “It's pretty ugly,” he said. “It's worse than I expected,” said Mike Sole, secretary of Florida's Department of Environmental Protection. “What do we do now?” asked Morgan White, 15, who has a scar on her hip from skimboarding on this water. “This is what we do. We wake up and we come here.” Up the road, a sign flashed: OIL ON BEACH. The bulldozers beeped. News crews gathered. If the beach is church, Wednesday felt like a funeral. Kevin Reed, 36, who learned to swim here and taught his own son, right here, how to swim, walked to the oil and cried. “I can't help it,” he said. “This just kills me. It feels like somebody just ripped my heart out. I knew it was going to be bad. I didn't know it was going to be like this.” He looked back at the band. He noticed there were no birds. “It's damn near biblical.” http://www.tampabay.com/news/environment/article1104604.ece added by: julesrs007

Johan Santana — Sex With Accuser Was Consensual

Filed under: Johan Santana , Celebrity Justice , TMZ Sports New York Mets ace Johan Santana ‘fessed up to having sex with the woman who accused him of sexual battery

Rick Ross Talks ‘Blowin’ Money Fast (B.M.F.)’ Video

The Bawse says Diddy, Bun B turn up in clip for Albert Anastasia EP track; hints Spike Lee may direct ‘Live Fast, Die Young.’ By Shaheem Reid Rick Ross Photo: MTV News Rick Ross has been busy building visuals. At the top of this week, the Bawse and director Parris completed production in New York City on his video for street banger “Blowin’ Money Fast (B.M.F.)” with the likes of the Lox, Bun B and Diddy showing up to set. Ross plans to shoot two more clips soon: one for “MC Hammer,” and the other for “Live Fast, Die Young,” off the upcoming Teflon Don. “Shout out to Spiff TV,” Ross said this past Saturday at Atlanta’s Philips Arena. He’d just come offstage, after performing at Hot 107.9’s Birthday Bash 15 concert . “Spiff [is directing] ‘MC Hammer’. We haven’t shot it yet, but shout out to MC Hammer. We talked a couple of times. We just putting everything together,” Ross said. “I think it’s gonna be real cool to make sure he’s in it. I think it’s mandatory that Hammer bless the screen man. Look out for Parris — we shot the first half of ‘B.M.F.’ in Carol City [and] Little Haiti,” the Miami MC said of the Florida backdrops. “Everybody, they just gonna come [show] respect for the streets, the movement is feeling good.” As for the video for the Kanye West-produced “Live Fast, Die Young,” Ross is thinking bigger budgets and an A-list director. He recently took to his Twitter and posted a photograph of himself and Spike Lee, hinting that he and one of Brooklyn’s finest may be teaming up soon. “What I actually tweeted — and you should actually follow me @rickyrozay — when I was in Hawaii, me and Kanye did a different kind of record and it may take a different kind of director. It was me, up in the middle of the night reflecting. It was an actual picture [from when] Spike came out to my birthday. I had a private get-together in Miami. Spike came out, we discussed a few things. It’s one of those things [that] I call speaking it into existence. I feel once I put something in my mind, I can accomplish it. Shout out to the big homie F. Gary Gray. I can’t commend him enough. We pulled that off with ‘Super High’,” Ross said of landing the Hollywood director for the visual. “Whoever would have thought? It’s something that’s most definitely possible.” While the bearded MC is looking forward to the “Live Fast” video, with whoever may sign on to direct, he said it was important to keep his priorities straight. “First and foremost, we gotta release the record,” he smiled, referring to “Live Fast, Die Young.” “It’s real close. I’mma tell you that. Thanks to everybody for the support on ‘Super High.’ We about to crack top 10 on that. I told myself, once I crack top 10 with the first record, I was gonna come with that next big one. It’s feeling like in the next week or two, we could be coming with it. It’s something I’m most definitely anticipating, all the pieces to the project fell into place. July 20, Teflon Don in stores.” After seeing Ross’ Hollywood-style “Super High” video, are you eagerly anticipating more clips? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Rick Ross (Hip-Hop)

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Rick Ross Talks ‘Blowin’ Money Fast (B.M.F.)’ Video