Posts Tagged ‘ update ’

Man Called ‘Terrorist’ & ‘Al-Qaida’ At Work Wins Harassment Lawsuit

January 25, 2012

SAN FRANCISCO — A San Francisco jury awarded $465,000 to a Muslim security guard who says his co-workers and supervisors called him a terrorist and an al-Qaida member. The 27-year-old says he quit his job as a security guard for Los Angeles-based Andrews International in February 2010 after the company failed to take his complaints about harassment seriously. He had served as a guard at the Letterman Digital Arts Center in the Presidio. An attorney for Andrews says the company had promoted Idris to a supervisory position and plans to appeal the verdict. ___ See original here: Man Called ‘Terrorist’ & ‘Al-Qaida’ At Work Wins Harassment Lawsuit

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Record Air Pollution Slams California’s Ag Heartland

January 25, 2012

FRESNO, Calif. — This is the time of year when residents who often live with the nation’s worst pollution often can draw a breath of fresh air. But this winter has not been kind to people who want to play outside in California’s Central Valley. A dry December and January has stagnated air across California, but nowhere is the situation more serious than between Modesto and Bakersfield, where nearly every day dirty air has exceeded federal health standards. It’s the worst air quality recorded in a dozen years, and it’s the unhealthiest kind_ microscopic, chemical-laden particles that can get into lungs and absorbed into the bloodstream to create health risks in everyone, not just the young and infirm. The southern San Joaquin half of the valley stretches 200 miles from Stockton to Bakersfield and is home to 4 million people. It traditionally records the highest level of particulate matter and ozone pollution in the United States and has a rate of asthma three times the national average, according to the American Lung Association. Air quality advocates have argued for years that the local air district’s focus on fireplace burn bans ignores other major sources of industrial pollution, such as dairies, feed lots and oil rigs. “The air board’s strategy is failing,” said Kevin Hall, executive director of the Central Valley Air Quality Coalition. Air officials say their policies are sound, but there is little they can do with La Nina conditions in the Pacific creating stagnant air. Fighting air pollution in the Central Valley is a task that so far has not succeeded in meeting federal health standards. Surrounded on three sides by mountains, the valley opens in the north toward San Francisco and Sacramento, where weather patterns suck emissions south. Cutting through the valley are the state’s two main north-south highway corridors, the routes for nearly all long-distance tractor trailer rigs, the No. 2 source of particulate pollution in the valley. Also in the mix are millions of acres of plowed farmland and 1.6 million dairy cows and the flatulence and ammonia-laden manure they create. Without wind and rain, the air sits, trapped as if in a pot with a lid. Since 2003, the San Joaquin Valley Air Pollution Control District has targeted fireplace soot as biggest source that is easiest to end and calls “no burn days” based on weather forecasts. Fires were banned on nearly every day in December, including Christmas Eve and New Year’s, and the 60 people who patrol neighborhoods writing citations to offenders have been busy. Violations doubled in some areas and were up to five times higher in others last month as the district cracked down during unseasonably cold weather. “When we have weather conditions like this, there is nothing we can do really to meet the federal standards,” said Seyed Sadredin, executive director of the district. “Even if we shut down I-5 and (U.S. Highway) 99 and shut businesses we would still violate the standard because there’s no dispersion. The best we can do is to minimize the damage, and the best way to do that is with the fireplace rule.” The struggle with particulate pollution comes after the district failed during the summer months, despite a publicity campaign, to keep ozone emissions under EPA limits to avoid ongoing federal fines. Warnings about the potential adverse health effects of air pollution become a year-round event in the valley. And those warnings are about to start coming more furiously. This week district officials lowered by nearly half the level of pollution they say is safe for outdoor activities. The air district helped fund a study of 1 million residents in 2011 that found that emergency room visits for asthma and heart attacks went up when particulate pollution went up. That convinced officials that the federal government’s standard, which relied on a 24-hour average of air quality, was too high. Small particulates in the bloodstream can break off plaque in the coronary artery, creating a logjam and a heart attack. “The old level may work for Beijing, China, but we need to bring it down to where it really belongs,” said David Lighthall, the district’s health science adviser. “We are recognizing that the air quality is different from one time of day to another and we’re trying to give people the information they need to make decisions about outdoor exercise.” The district sends advisories to schools and those signed up for email alerts, called “Real Time Outdoor Activity Risk” warnings, whenever the air reaches the “unhealthy” level so that teachers know whether to call off recess and residents can decide to postpone a jog or a bike ride. On Friday morning, for instance, some Fresno residents received an email alert at 10 a.m. working that the air was “Level 5 Very Unhealthy” for everyone, indicating the highest levels of pollution. “We can give people a tool, whether an athlete or school manager, and ensure they do stay indoors at particular times when air quality is threatening, and also find out when a better time to go out would be,” Lighthall said. Just before Christmas, the Center for Race, Poverty and the Environment sued the U.S. EPA on behalf of Central Valley residents alleging it has not pressed California for a viable, enforceable plan to improve air quality. “We are going to need far tighter rules coming out of the air district if we are really going to make progress in meeting federal standards,” said Tom Franz of the Bakersfield-based Association of Irritated Residents, one of the groups suing. Air pollution officials say the technology doesn’t yet exist to lessen the valley’s pollution and bring the region into compliance, though the district is investing in research and giving grants for things such as the new generation of battery powered leaf blowers and lawn mowers. ______ Twitter: (at)TConeAP See the article here: Record Air Pollution Slams California’s Ag Heartland

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Husband Accused Of Poisoning Wife’s Rice Krispies

January 15, 2012

AZUSA, Calif. — A Southern California man has been arrested on suspicion of putting poison in his wife’s cereal. Los Angeles County jail records show 43-year-old Fernando Porras of Azusa was being held on $1 million bail Saturday on suspicion of the attempted murder of his 51-year-old wife, Fernanda. Azusa police Cpl. Randy Schmidt says the woman noticed a horrible taste and smell Thursday in her Rice Krispies. Police allege Porras put a poisonous chemical in the cereal, but they didn’t say what it was. Police Sgt. Dewayne Eldridge says the woman wasn’t believed to be seriously harmed by the substance. Porras is scheduled to appear in court Tuesday. Go here to see the original: Husband Accused Of Poisoning Wife’s Rice Krispies

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Update On Woman Accused Of Slicing Husband’s Penis

January 6, 2012

SANTA ANA, Calif. — A grand jury has indicted a California woman accused of cutting off a man’s penis after tying him to a bed. Orange County district attorney’s spokeswoman Farrah Emami says 48-year-old Catherine Kieu was indicted Thursday on a felony count of torture and a felony count of aggravated mayhem. Kieu lived with the 60-year-old victim and is suspected of getting into an argument over a future houseguest’s visit on July 11, 2011. After the man went to sleep, authorities say she severed the organ and threw it into a garbage disposal. With a sentencing enhancement for personal use of a knife, Kieu could face a life sentence without possibility of parole if convicted on all counts. She is due for arraignment Monday. See original here: Update On Woman Accused Of Slicing Husband’s Penis

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States Change How They Recruit Foster Parents

January 2, 2012

MIAMI — For decades, it was common for officials around the country to approve foster parents by room and board criteria: Did they pass a background check? Is their home clean? Are their dogs safe and vaccinated? Now several states including Florida, California and Wisconsin are trying to find ones who they know upfront will help with homework, sew Halloween costumes and accompany kids to doctor appointments. Complicating the efforts is the longtime problem of finding enough adults to house children in need. “Most jurisdictions end up being in a reactive mode because they don’t have enough fosters parents so they’re just focused on getting people into the fold instead of making sure standards for parents are elevated,” said David Sanders, an executive vice president at Casey Family Programs, an advocacy organization in Seattle. In Florida, the demand for foster homes was so dire that children were sleeping in child welfare offices as recently as a few years ago. And there were recurring problems for the parents that it could recruit: unreturned phone calls, condescending caseworkers and an inability to get the records they needed. They also weren’t invited to staff meetings where the child welfare professionals were making decisions about the foster child’s case. Former Department of Children and Families Secretary Bob Butterworth worked with Carole Shauffer, executive director of Youth Law Center and an attorney who often sued the state, to make sweeping changes to the system in 2007. Through a far-reaching Quality Parenting Initiative program, Shauffer worked with foster parents and child welfare workers in Florida to address those issues during a 90-day program. Meetings were designed to bring foster parents and caseworkers together to open the lines of communication. Florida changed the way it trains staff and recruits foster parents, even offering online training to make it more convenient to get certified. Overall, the changes led to a distinct cultural change in how the two view each other. The program also encourages small improvements, like returning foster parents’ phone calls or writing a thank-you note to them. Shauffer’s team heads the initial effort and stresses the program is not a marketing campaign, but rather an ongoing effort to change stereotypes, increase communication and cut through barriers between foster parents and state agencies. Shauffer’s organization spent more than $150,000 in 15 regions across Florida this past year. The tab was picked up by an advocacy group. Several counties in California began using the program in 2009 after seeing Florida’s success. “The cost is minimal. It’s the commitment that’s hard,” said Shauffer, who said child welfare agencies in both states have made the changes a priority. Foster parent groups say the changes are sorely needed. “We can use overhauling,” said David Sharp, public policy chairman for National Foster Parent Association. Sharp says that while conditions vary by state and county, foster parents often don’t get to comment in court on how the child is doing on a daily basis. Instead, volunteers representing the children and attorneys for the state typically give their opinions about where they think a judge should place a child. “Agencies don’t take us seriously. No matter how upset or concerned we might get for children’s wellbeing, there’s really nothing we can do,” said Sharp, who is also a former Alabama foster parent of 27 children. “(Foster parents)…see they don’t have any effect on the child’s life long term and they quit.” Around the country, smaller-scale efforts are springing up to address problems. Connecticut’s new child welfare Commissioner Joette Katz has pushed for massive foster care reform, saying the agency needs to respect foster parents, include them in decision making and provide better support services. Her changes come in the aftermath of a class-action lawsuit in 1989 alleging Connecticut’s child welfare system was failing to find quality permanent families for foster children. At one point, 30 to 35 percent of foster kids were being housed in group homes and institutions – a costly but generally inferior alternative to foster homes, said Ira Lustbader, lead attorney for the lawsuit filed by the advocacy group Children’s Rights. The state was so short on foster homes they were sometimes keeping unqualified foster parents, he said. An independent federal court that is monitoring reform efforts has repeatedly said the state overuses group homes and institutions instead of recruiting more foster parents. In 2008, the state agreed to add 850 foster family homes by July 2010, yet had a net loss of 84 foster homes as of July 2011. Tennessee and New Jersey have had success launching efforts to recruit homes specifically for teenagers and children with disabilities and other special needs – populations that often end up in group homes or institutions. In 2006, Wisconsin launched a four-year marketing campaign where child welfare officials assessed the motivations of their best foster parents. They realized the majority did it for personal fulfillment or spiritual desires. They crafted a marketing campaign, trying to attract foster families akin to Peace Corps recruits – an honest way to balance tough work and poor pay with a priceless human reward. The website didn’t just include rosy stories from foster parents. Officials were up front that “this is painful, this is hard work. There are no rewards sometimes,” said Colleen Ellingson, CEO of Adoption Resources of Wisconsin, who coordinated the effort. Some foster care agencies initially felt it was a waste of money. “Within a year they all said this was the most effective help we’ve ever had. It was driving families to them,” she said. One area had 25 potential foster families contact them in one month. In the past they’d never had more than five. Some states are also cutting foster parents who don’t meet expectations. Miami foster parent Maritza Moreno says she’s frustrated when she hears of fellow foster parents relying on medical transport provided by the state to take their child to the doctor. “A parent would never do that,” said Moreno, an insurance adjuster, who has fostered eight children, mostly babies, in the past four years. She says foster children “really need a parent, not a caregiver.” Original post: States Change How They Recruit Foster Parents

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Magnificent Ball Dress

December 28, 2011
Magnificent Ball Dress

Magnificent Ball Dress This ball gown comes with a matching shawl and detachable straps at no additional charge! Comes only in colors: Purple, Aqua, Fuchsia, Pink, Turquoise, White, Red & only in sizes: 4, 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 16. Please note we also have Purple & White in sizes 18 & 20, feel free to contact us if you need those sizes. The purple & aqua dresses are pictured, as well as an actual swatch of the fuchsia. Please follow the size chart below on ordering your size & measure yourself in inches. Please click on this link for help on how to find your dress size. Go here to read the rest: Magnificent Ball Dress

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HIGHLIGHTS: Kobe And Pau Lift Lakers Over Jazz For First Win

December 28, 2011

LOS ANGELES — After finishing three games in roughly 56 hours with their best effort yet, Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers demonstrated why their demise might not be as imminent as many thought. Bryant scored 26 points, Pau Gasol added 22 points and nine rebounds, and the Lakers avoided just the fourth 0-3 start in franchise history with a 96-71 victory over the Utah Jazz on Tuesday night. Metta World Peace scored 14 points for the Lakers, who had much more life than the Jazz despite playing their third game in three nights to open the season. Los Angeles ran away with a dominant third quarter, making a 27-8 surge out of halftime in the club’s first win for coach Mike Brown. After a tumultuous preseason under a new coaching staff, several injuries and the NBA’s only three-games-in-three-nights start, the Lakers realize they’re still lacking a consistent identity and a thorough knowledge of Brown’s game plan. At least a blowout win over the Jazz allowed them to enjoy their first day off since training camp began. “We’re a very active team,” Bryant said. “This is a blue-collar team. We’re a scrappy bunch. You saw that. We’re going to fight and scratch and claw for everything, as it should be. That’ll get us by.” With a Christmas loss to the Chicago Bulls and another defeat in Sacramento one night later, the Lakers got off to their first 0-2 start since the 2002-03 season. But Los Angeles has started 0-3 just three times in franchise history – just once in the last 50 years (1978-79). Utah missed 17 of its first 19 shots in the second quarter while the Lakers made a 13-0 run capped by a one-handed dunk by World Peace, the normally ground-bound leader of Los Angeles’ second unit. Los Angeles blew out the Jazz after halftime, jumping to a 68-39 lead with a 12-2 run. “To hold a team to 32 percent and 71 points in an NBA game, I don’t care who you’re playing, you’re doing something right on that end of the floor,” Brown said. “The focus, the energy, the effort, that communication and trust that we brought defensively, was exciting to see.” The Lakers comprehensively shut down the Jazz, the last NBA team to open its regular season. Paul Millsap had 18 points and 10 rebounds for Utah, but coach Tyrone Corbin scowled throughout the lowest-scoring performance in an opener in franchise history. “They’re a veteran team, they have a lot of pride, and they have some great players in that locker room,” Corbin said. “I told our guys before the game, `If you expect them to come out and lay down because they’re playing there games in three nights, you’re mistaken.’ They wanted to get the monkey off their back as soon as they could, and they played like it.” In the Jazz’s first season opener without coach Jerry Sloan running their bench since 1988, Utah made just 20 shots in the first three quarters and shot 20 fewer free throws than the Lakers. Al Jefferson went 2 for 16, C.J. Miles was 1 for 8, and rookie Enes Kanter was 1 for 7 in his NBA debut. At least Utah’s 25-point loss was one point better than the biggest blowout loss in Utah opener history. “It didn’t seem like much was working for us,” said Utah forward Gordon Hayward, who had seven points. “It felt like we were a little stagnant, just standing around and watching a little bit. They kind of blew it open in the third quarter, and we can’t allow that to happen. But it’s just one game. We just need to be more confident shooters.” The Lakers got their only back-to-back-to-back series of games out of the way immediately, although they still won’t even get consecutive days off until mid-January. When the New York Knicks visit Staples Center on Thursday night, Los Angeles still will be without starting center Andrew Bynum, who will finish his four-game suspension for misbehavior in last spring’s playoffs. The Lakers already are hurting this season, with Bryant nursing a torn ligament in his right wrist and Gasol wearing extra support for his sprained right shoulder. Veteran Matt Barnes, who’s dealing with bursitis in his left hip, didn’t play for the second time in three games despite a loud fan chant for him in the fourth quarter. Millsap came off the Utah bench, playing through tendinitis in his right quadriceps that nearly kept him out of uniform. Jazz newcomer Josh Howard had 10 points in 24 minutes. NOTES: Corbin waited until right before game time to rule in Millsap, the Jazz’s sturdy power forward. Millsap was a reserve for most of his first four NBA seasons, but started all 76 games in which he appeared last season. … Lakers F Troy Murphy fouled out in 32 scoreless minutes, but he also had 11 rebounds and four assists. … Utah plays five games in the next seven days, including a one-day trip to San Antonio. The Lakers have four games in the next seven days. See more here: HIGHLIGHTS: Kobe And Pau Lift Lakers Over Jazz For First Win

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Uphill Climb For The National American Latino Museum

December 25, 2011

LOS ANGELES — Television’s highest-earning actress and a San Francisco art museum chief are two of the key figures in the bid to establish a new museum on the Mall devoted to the history and culture of American Latinos. But Eva Longoria, who will rally public support for a bill in Congress to create the museum, and Jonathan Yorba, chairman of the museum-lobbying group that picked her, also played key roles in the creation of a problem-plagued Los Angeles museum and cultural center focused on the contributions of Mexican Americans in Southern California. See the original post here: Uphill Climb For The National American Latino Museum

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Drake Rips Tattoo Artist Who Wrote His Name On Fan’s Forehead

December 25, 2011

She tatted his name on her forehead, and, as promised, Drake has confirmed that he knows she is for real. He’s not 100% pleased, though. The rapper on Friday spoke out about the California woman who got his name tattooed in huge block letters across her forehead , calling her “incredible,” but the artist who did it “a f*cking asshole.” “I want to meet her and understand what happened,” he told LA radio host Mando Fresko. “That’s cool though, I feel you 100%, that to me is absolutely incredible.” As for the artist, Kevin Campbell, Drake put out a warning. “The guy who tatted is a f*cking as*hole though, I will tell you that,” he said. “I don’t f*ck with that guy. F*ck you to that tat artist by the way. And you should lose your job and should never do tattoos again and I don’t f*ck with you. And if I ever see you, I’m a f*ck you up.” For his part, the artist told Vice Magazine that he wasn’t exactly keen on doing the ink in the first place. “She was really psyched about it. She had the sh*tty font all picked out on her iPhone ready to go and was pretty adamant about putting it on her forehead,” he said. “She acted as if she had planned it out for a while, but I’m not really sure how much extended coherent thought could actually go into getting such a stupid tattoo on your forehead.” However, that mea culpa will probably get drowned out by this: “The funny thing is, I didn’t know who Drake was,” Campbell admitted. “I figured it was her hood or some shit, not some goofnugget R&B dude.” WATCH : Read the original post: Drake Rips Tattoo Artist Who Wrote His Name On Fan’s Forehead

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Red Flag Warnings Still In Effect

December 5, 2011

PASADENA, Calif. — Thousands of Southern Californians who have gone without power for five days are being told it’s almost over, though a new round of high wind warnings have been issued for some areas hard hit by last week’s ferocious windstorm. The National Weather Service warnings are in effect through Tuesday afternoon for gusts of up to 60 mph below mountain passes and in canyons. Some coastal and inland desert areas could see 50 mph gusts. There also are red flag warnings in some areas because of high fire danger from gusty, dry weather. However, the winds won’t be as strong as last week, when gusts of nearly 100 mph were recorded. Those winds toppled power lines and trees and fanned small fires. Some 300,000 people lost power. Some remain blacked out, but Southern California Edison said “99.9 percent” of customers who lost electricity will have it back Monday. Utility crews took advantage of calm weather Sunday and worked to restore power to about 42,000 customers who remained without power in the afternoon, spokesman Charles Coleman said in a statement. Some of the still powerless were skeptical. “We’ve heard everywhere from tomorrow to Wednesday to next week,” Kristine Aguirre of Temple City told KABC-TV. Coleman said the areas hardest hit were cities in the Pasadena area east of Los Angeles like Temple City, Arcadia, Monrovia and Alhambra. “It was horrible,” said AnnMarie Trudeau, whose Monrovia condominium was without power for four days. “I ended up staying at my parents’ because I’m wimpy.” Some took matters into their own hands. Pasadena city spokeswoman Ann Erdman said she had received reports that some residents were opening pole boxes at the base of street lights and stringing wire to their homes, a move she said is both illegal and extremely dangerous. “The voltage in most boxes in much too high for individual homes,” Erdman said in a statement. The Wednesday windstorm toppled trees and power lines, blocked roads and destroyed at least four homes. To the north, about 1,000 PG&E customers in the Santa Cruz Mountains still had no electricity early Sunday afternoon, but work in getting the power turned on was expected to be finished later in the day, said utility spokesman J.D. Guidi. In the Sierra Nevada, crews were also working on restoring service to about 1,700 people in Tuolumne County. Guidi said at the height of the windstorms last week, service had been knocked out to about 545,000 homes and businesses in PG&E’s service area. The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power said in a statement that all service in the city was restored Sunday. See the article here: Red Flag Warnings Still In Effect

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Raw Police Video