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Wednesday, 3 December 2014

Storm drenches California, but it's only a drop in state's drought bucket


© Al Seib, Los Angeles Times

Danny Lopez, left, and Fernando Hacindo work to stem mud and debris flowing down a blocked drain in Camarillo Springs.



The first major Pacific storm of the season drenched much of California on Tuesday, slaking a parched and dusty region, but still leaving the state deep in a historic drought.

The stream of subtropical moisture dropped more than an inch of rain over much of Los Angeles County by evening, with higher numbers in the local mountains. In foothills and canyons where fires recently burned desiccated brush, residents scrambled to set up barricades to divert debris flows and prepared to evacuate.


In Camarillo, gushing mud and water prompted a mandatory evacuation of 75 homes where a slide had buried a residence on Halloween. In Glendora and Azusa, homeowners and fire crews worked feverishly to buttress sandbags with plywood and concrete blocks. Rock slides hit the road in Malibu Canyon, and in Silverado Canyon residents moved horses and other large livestock to lower, flatter terrain.


The rain was expected to taper off during the night, with another band of moisture arriving in the morning.


But fears of nature's destructive power were tempered by optimism.


The storm gave state water officials the first glimmer of hope in more than a year; on Monday they increased 2015 water allocations in response to improving precipitation forecasts.


Lake Oroville - the keystone reservoir of the California State Water Project, which delivers water from Northern California south - took in 5 billion gallons over the last 10 days, officials said. Still, that is less than 1% of its capacity.


State water experts said it would take 150% of the average rainfall for California to recover from the current drought. That would mean a total of 75 inches of rain from Oct. 1, 2014, through Sept. 30, 2015, recorded at eight stations in the northern Sierra.


"Even if you had a tremendous downpour this weekend, who knows what's going to happen in the next two months," said Doug Carlson, spokesman for the California Department of Water Resources. "We certainly hope that the rainfall we have now pushes us toward normal - but we're still below normal.... We're just trying to get to average."


For residents of Southern California, the storm provided a break from a monotonous, seemingly endless span of sunny days. Children splashed in puddles, pedestrians huddled under awnings and bus stops, and gawkers gathered to see the Los Angeles River - normally a trickle - come to a dangerous roar.


The homeless on skid row struggled to stay dry, standing in doorways and crouching under blankets. The better-appointed zipped up their tents, while others made shelters with tarps, grocery carts and wheelchairs.


Under an awning near the Union Rescue Mission, Oliver Svenson, 62, from Denmark, sat in a blue walker with a clear plastic bag over his knees. He came outside Tuesday afternoon to get some fresh air.


"I'm enjoying the rain - I like the four seasons," he said. "I'm getting into meditation and looking for a new perspective."


In the San Gabriel foothills below the area burned in January by the Colby fire, the perspective was anything but new: keep the mud away from homes.


More than 18,000 sandbags were distributed in Glendora in anticipation of the storm, in addition to the 50,000 given out earlier in the year.


Los Angeles County firefighters came Monday night to put sandbags around Ed Heinlein's home on Ridge View Drive in Azusa. Heinlein, 66, darted around his property Tuesday, reinforcing a plywood barricade with wire.


In March, less than two months after the fire, 2,500 tons of mud broke through the steel fence meant to stop it, plowing into his home, he said. The house was red-tagged and the family spent the last eight months cleaning up the mess. Then on Halloween night, a relatively minor storm delivered three feet of mud to his backyard.


He put in a new $20,000 steel fence three weeks ago, but still feared what would come in a microburst.


Glendora suffered a massive debris flow in 1969 that destroyed 30 homes.


"Now they claim it's all coming back," said Heinlein, 66. "If we get three inches of rain we'll get a 10-foot mud flow."


His neighbor David Jones, 58, moved his cars down the hill and put the family's valuables upstairs.


"This is life up here," Jones said. "As long as everyone is walking at the end of the day, the houses and all that stuff can be rebuilt."


Jones said he has no plans to leave, despite voluntary evacuation advisories.


"I've been up here this long, I'm not going to bail now. It's part of life."


By evening, water was streaming down the gullies and into the street, but no mud.


By 6 p.m, the mandatory evacuation was lifted in Camarillo, and some people were starting to count their blessings.


Unlike most rainstorms this time of year, which typically come from Alaska, this storm system came from a subtropical area of the Pacific southwest of California. It's warm and wet, with high snow levels. Traffic was predictably clogged. Flights were delayed and canceled.


The storm system set records for the date across the Southland. The 1.15 inches that fell in downtown Los Angeles broke the mark of 1.10 inches for Dec. 2, 1961.


Northern California was sopping too. "Thus far, we're at about 11th in the wettest one-day period in the last eight or nine years," said forecaster Bob Benjamin of the National Weather Service's Monterey office. "It's likely the wettest period thus far this rain season, and quite possibly this calendar year."


Scientists have yet to determine whether the Eastern Pacific is falling into an El NiƱo pattern and will produce a wetter than average year.


Still, state water officials decided to double the initial allocations that water agencies will receive from the State Water Project in 2015, which delivers water from the Sierra to farmland in the Central Valley and urban Southern California through a vast network of reservoirs and canals.


Those numbers are still small - just 10% of what was requested from the project. The 5% allocation this year was the lowest amount in the project's 52-year history.


Also Tuesday, officials at the State Water Resources Control Board issued a monthly report on water conservation, showing that California had reduced use by 6.7% in October compared with the previous October. Californians cut usage 11.6% in August and 10.3% in September.


Water board officials said Southern California lagged in rationing.While most of the state's hydrologic regions continued to conserve at consistent rates, the South Coast Hydrologic Region, which includes Los Angeles, reduced its water use only 1.4% in October. During summer months, the region had cut use by as much as 7.8%, helping push statewide water conservation to its highest levels this year.


State Water Resources Control Board Chairwoman Felicia Marcus said Southern California "definitely dragged down the curve."


"I guess the message is: 'What's up So Cal?" she said. "We're not out of this drought until we have a whole series of storms like this."


Zillow created 'adult frat house' culture: Lawsuit

sexual harassment

© Shutterstock

Sexual Harassment In The Office



A California woman sued her former employer, the online real estate firm Zillow, after supervisors allegedly harassed and propositioned her for sex and subjected her to what she described as "sexual torture," the reported.

The suit by Rachel Kremer, filed in Orange County on Monday, accuses supervisors at the company's Irvine office of cultivating an "adult frat house" culture and refusing to take action when she reported the offensive behavior. Kremer also accuses the Seattle-based company of firing her for bringing the harassment to light.


"Privately, Zillow executives bragged that the office culture led to more sexual encounters than Match.com, and referred to the internal office directory as 'Zinder,' named after the dating application Tinder," the suit states.


Kremer began working for the company's sales department in June 2012. Her attorneys enclosed copies of lewd messages she received between December 2012 and her termination this past August.


"I have a great opportunity that just opened up on my face in the 92660 market," sales manager Cody Fagnant told her in a text message. "Call me if you are interested. This is an executive position and won't last long. Haha. Goodnight Rachey."


Less than two months later, Kremer's supervisor, Gabe Schmidt, invited Kremer to an event after working hours with a message saying, "Call me. Matt is showering. Thinking 333 dinner drinks and your smooth vagina." Not long after that, Schmidt sent her another text directly asking her, "Wanna blow me and have sex tonight?"


The harassment allegedly continued into this year, when Schmidt sent her a picture of his genitalia in another text message and refused to discipline another employee after Kremer told him he was watching explicit videos at work. The suit also states that Schmidt referred to another female employee as "Rachel 2.0," saying she had "bigger breasts and less miles on her" than Kremer.


Kremer's attorneys argue that she felt she had to take part in the company's culture out of fear of being "outcast" and fired.


"Zillow attempted to cover up their conduct by having Ms. Kremer sign a confidentiality agreement and release," the lawsuit states. "Ms. Kremer brings this action based on the sexual torture endured, and for the other women who have been silenced at Zillow, and remain exposed to horrific and unthinkable acts."


The company told Kremer at the time of her firing that she did not meet her sales goals for July and August 2014. But the suit argues that, besides not being alerted to any performance issues beforehand, that Kremer's productivity was "nearly identical" to that of another employee hired around the time of her termination.


A company spokesperson, Jill Simmons, said in a statement that Zillow is taking the allegations "very seriously."


"When this allegation was first made, we immediately investigated these claims and, as a result, took quick action and terminated a sales employee in our Irvine office," Simmons said. "The allegations in the complaint do not reflect Zillow's culture or workplace and are completely inconsistent with our values. We don't tolerate harassment of any kind."


Zillow currently operates an online real estate directory in conjunction with Yahoo. The company says on its website that it has listings for more than 110 million properties around the country.


The lawsuit, as posted by ValleyWag, can be seen below.


Putin puts the ball squarely in the EU's court: A new unpalatable choice

EU bureaucrats

© Brian Gable



Putin's model of handling the internal and external partners, competitors and even enemies have long been known to all who are willing to look at things rationally. At the first stage, Putin offers a very good compromise. It is taken as a sign of weakness and rejected. At the second stage, the situation for those who rejected the compromise is rapidly deteriorating and a new compromise is offered, but significantly less profitable. And this continues up until there is no more compromise, or until a forever inflexible partner will "choke on a polonium scarf" in London. For example, in the situation with South Stream, we are observing phase two: the deterioration of EU's position with a hint of a new compromise in the form of an extended "Blue Stream" and a gas hub on a border with Greece.

In fact, Putin is now forcing the EU to recognize the mess in Ukraine is not Russian, but a European problem. Having reached agreements on gas, in which the most important was the acknowledgement by the EU of Ukraine's debt and not agreeing that Russia has the full right to demand pre-payment, one can expect that simply from a sense of self-preservation Brussels will either give Kiev money, or will pay for Kiev or will just look away while Moscow will bring order to Kiev. For political reasons, and under a pressure from United States, Brussels decided not to do it. To give money to Kiev for gas is useless and dangerous for that bureaucrat who will sign the payment order from the EU - his career will be over. To pay directly for Kiev is a disastrous humiliation, in front of the opposition, business, taxpayers and voters who will not forgive the politicians that they had a falling out with Russia in order to obtain the right to pay for the debts of the American puppets in Kiev. European officials also refused to turn away as Moscow cleans up in Kiev, because behind them are the terrifying American detachments armed with folders of dirt collected by the NSA over the last few decades.


As a result, an ostrich approach has prevailed in the EU - the hope that Moscow will deliver gas to Europe at any cost, even if a theft on credit by Kiev regime has to be tolerated. In recent weeks, even for the most die-hard European politicians, it became clear that it is worthless to wait for concessions from the Kremlin. It is obvious that the Kremlin is very angry at the sanctions and will gladly arrange for Europe something worse than the remake of the past "gas wars" just so that European politicians will not think that their actions against the Russian Federation will remain without consequences and that Russia will continue to be an open and accommodating partner.


Ritual slaughter of South Stream, made before the eyes of the entire European press is a stark and clear message. European politicians had hoped that at worst Europe will have to endure one cold winter without gas and the destruction of "imperial ambitions of Russia" is worth the sacrifice. According to European logic (it is not much different from Ukrainian), Russia needs the European gas market so badly, that Gazprom will build South Stream for its own money, will give half of capacity to its own competitors, as required by the "third energy package of the EU", and will sponsor Ukraine with gas supplies - all for the sake of access to the European market. Putin has destroyed this logic, drawing a new vector of Russia's energy policy:



"We will reroute the flow of our energy resources to other regions of the world, including through the promotion and accelerated implementation of projects for liquefied natural gas. We will develop other markets, and Europe will not receive these volumes, in any case, from Russia. We believe that this is not consistent with the economic interests of Europe and undermines our cooperation. But this is the choice of our European friends" ( RIA Novosti )



In the analysis of the situation in Ukraine, published back in May, I have outlined the gas contract with China as one of the key steps necessary to untie the hands of Russia in other areas of foreign policy. Now we see the results of this work of the Kremlin in the Chinese pivot. Putin seems to say to the Europeans: "Be careful what you wish for, it may come true." Europeans have released a Russian genie from a sanctions bottle, which began to fulfill European desires with generosity. Europeans are in panic and shock that Putin painted a very unpleasant future for them. As long as pro-American junta sits in Kiev, Europe will be cold and without gas every winter. Think about it! Each winter - huge economic losses and terrible political hell for European politicians.

Putin promised Europe not a "Groundhog Day" but a "Groundhog Winter" - endless nightmare which will not be solved by supplies of expensive American LNG. And again, Europe faces a choice: to give Ukraine the money (every year!) or to pay for the Ukrainian gas (every year!) or to turn away while Moscow will bring order to Kiev (once!). This is the new "Putin's compromise."



Every cold day, every cold month, every billion euros of losses and every million of frozen voters who will demand that "Ukraine already be given to those Russians" - all of this will push the Europeans to the desired solution. In the process of "taming" of the European Union, part of the profits of Gazprom for 2015 may have to be sacrificed, but to break the will of Brussels to resist is much more important and this will provide us with significant income in the future and will protect our country from many problems in the Western direction. As practice shows, freezing Europe is a smart and flexible Europe. Russia, as its known, is a generous soul. Putin calls Europeans "friends" not for nothing, and a friend is revealed in trouble. Europe has a problem - it is sick with "Americanism" and "Obamamania". A good friend and doctor Putin had prescribed the best medicine - the healing energy starvation. Judging by the screams of European politicians and media at the sight of the prescription, the treatment will be difficult, but effective.

from Original


Philippines residents evacuating ahead of typhoon Hagupit


© NASA

Typhoon Hagupit



The Philippine government on Wednesday sent food and medical supplies to central provinces on the path of a category 3 typhoon, with many of them still reeling from devastation brought by super typhoon Haiyan late last year.

Residents of coastal villages and landslide-prone communities were told to move to government-designated evacuation areas, as typhoon Hagupit (Filipino for lash) barreled towards Eastern Samar province in central Philippines with winds of up to 140 kph and gusts of up to 170 kph.


Hagupit is currently hovering over Palau islands and is expected to pick up strength before hitting eastern Philippines on Saturday. Tropical Storm Risk forecasts Hagupit will become a category 4 typhoon in 36 hours.


"Definitely we will now strictly enforce forced evacuation," said Jerry Yaokasin, vice mayor of Tacloban City in central Philippines.


"We have no more excuse, we have gone through Yolanda, and to lose that many lives, it's beyond our conscience already," he said, referring to typhoon Haiyan which left more than 7,000 dead or missing in November last year.


Tacloban City, worst-hit by the strongest storm ever to make landfall, accounted for more than half of the dead from Haiyan. Nearly all of the city was either flattened or damaged.


While Hagupit is weaker than Haiyan's 250 kph winds, it is expected to bring 3-4 meter high storm surges, topple houses made of light materials and uproot trees, said officials at the state weather bureau, adding there was a 75 percent chance the typhoon will hit land.


"We are on a worst (case) scenario," Landrico Dalida Jr, deputy administrator at the state weather bureau Pagasa, said at a media briefing, adding there was a 25 percent chance Hagupit may veer north and miss Philippine coasts as it heads to Japan.


The Southeast Asian country was hardest hit by extreme weather in 2013, said a report by a German government-funded think tank Germanwatch.


Concerns over extreme weather have been exacerbated by an apparent shift in storm paths, with southern regions hit by powerful typhoons in the past three years. About 20 typhoons strike the country each year, most hitting the north along the main island of Luzon.


About 100 brains missing from University of Texas in Austin


© Dan Kitwood/Getty Images

Brains!



The University of Texas at Austin is missing about 100 brains - about half of the specimens the university had in a collection of brains preserved in jars of formaldehyde.

One of the missing brains is believed to have belonged to clock tower sniper Charles Whitman.


"We think somebody may have taken the brains, but we don't know at all for sure," psychology Professor Tim Schallert, co-curator of the collection, told the


His co-curator, psychology Professor Lawrence Cormack, said, "It's entirely possible word got around among undergraduates and people started swiping them for living rooms or Halloween pranks."


The Austin State Hospital had transferred the brains to the university about 28 years ago under a "temporary possession" agreement. Schallert said his psychology lab had room for only 100 brains, so the rest were moved to the basement of the university's Animal Resources Center.


"They are no longer in the basement," Cormack said.


The university said in a statement that it will investigate "the circumstances surrounding this collection since it came here nearly 30 years ago" and that it's "committed to treating the brain specimens with respect." It says the remaining brain specimens on campus are used "as a teaching tool and carefully curated by faculty."


The university's agreement with the hospital required the school to remove any data that might identify the person from whom the brain came. However, Schallert said Whitman's brain likely was part of the collection.


"It would make sense it would be in this group. We can't find that brain," he said.


Whitman's 1966 rampage at the University of Texas killed 16 people, including his mother and wife.


The 100 remaining brains at the school have been moved to the Norman Hackerman Building, where they are being scanned with high-resolution resonance imaging equipment, Cormack said.


"These MRI images will be both useful teaching and research tools. It keeps the brains intact," he told the newspaper.


Accident Took Place At Ukraine Nuclear Power Plant, Prime Minister Reveals



Several days ago we heard rumors, unsubstantiated, of an accident at Ukraine's Zaporozhye nuclear power plant, Europe's largest and the 5th biggest in the world. Considering Ukraine's history with nuclear accidents, and resultant panics, we decided it would be prudent to wait for an official confirmation before proceeding with a report. We got the confirmation about an hour ago, when Ukraine's new/old Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk, or "Yats" as his puppetmaster Victoria Nuland likes to call him, said "on Wednesday an accident had occurred at the Zaporizhye nuclear power plant (NPP) in south-east Ukraine and called on the energy minister to hold a news conference."


A "minor" accident that is, which remains a rather nebulous term on the continuum of nuclear power plant "malfunctions." So minor, in fact, the PM waited almost a week before revealing it to the world.



From Reuters:



"I know that an accident has occurred at the Zaporizhye NPP," Yatseniuk said, asking new energy minister Volodymyr Demchyshyn to make clear when the problem would be resolved and what steps would be taken to restore normal power supply across Ukraine.


News agency Interfax Ukraine said the problem had occurred at bloc No 3 - a 1,000-megawatt reactor - and the resulting lack of output had worsened the power crisis in the country. Interfax added that the bloc was expected to come back on stream on Dec. 5.



Just like Fukushima is expected to come back on line in a few years ago.



So is this just another Chernobyl? According to Ukraine, "the radioactive meltdown is contained." RT has more:



"There is no threat ... there are no problems with the reactors," Ukraine's Energy Minister Volodymyr Demchyshyn said at briefing, adding the accident affected the power output system and "in no way" was linked to power production itself.


The incident was not made public until Wednesday, when PM Yatsenyuk asked the energy minister to report on what happened and how the ministry is handling the situation.


The accident left several dozen towns and villages without electricity, Russian media reported, citing local officials.



Of course, there is no way to actually know what is happening on the ground as the NPP is located close enough to the "fog of war", that its status, and updates thereof, could merely be part of the fog of war. That said, if there is an unspoken message here by Ukraine, which recently handed over its gold to unknown "Western" interests, and suddenly feels neglected by its western allies (as its central bank head is about to find out personally), it is targeted directly at the IMF: "hand over more loans, or the nuclear power plant gets it."




Gilad Atzmon: The Palestinians have managed to topple another Israeli government

Netanyahu

© HISPANTV



Occasionally Israeli political and military leadership fail to survive Israeli wars. PM Golda Meir and her Chief Of Staff (David "Dado" Elazar) were sent home after the 1973 blunder (Yom Kippur war). PM Menachem Begin lost his sanity after the first Lebanon war (1982). Defense Minister Amir Peretz and his Chief Of Staff' Dan Halutz' were treated harshly by the Israeli media following the 2006 defeat in Lebanon. PM Benjamin Netanyahu is now paying a price for the recent Israeli disaster in Gaza and the Palestinian uprising that followed.

Strong nations tend to unite behind their leaders in times of crisis. The Israelis are spoiled. They prefer to turn against their leaders in times of conflict and not because they crave peace. Quite the opposite, they want to see a conclusive victory; buckets of Arab blood. Bibi didn't provide the goods and in the eyes of many Israeli patriots he was a softy.


Israel's didn't perform well in the last round of violence. The IDF didn't achieve a single military objective. After a few days, its forces withdrew, humiliated and exhausted. The Israeli military admitted that it lacked an answer to Palestinian ballistics, tunnels and fierceness. In addition, the conflict in Gaza spilled over to the West Bank and to Israeli cities. Throughout, Netanyahu's cabinet reacted slowly. It seemed confused by events. Soon Israelis were openly admitting that the future of the Jewish State was gloomier than ever.


The Israeli political establishment was quick to follow - with a total radicalization. The hawks wanted the state to admit that it is a 'Jewish home' instead of a 'Jewish democracy' (a term that in itself, provides a contradiction). The centrists and the Israeli Left insisted that Israel sustain the 'democratic' lie. It sounds good and the Goyim buy it they argued.


Earlier today, PM Netanyahu announced new elections after firing two key ministers in his government - Yesh Atid leader Finance Minister Yair Lapid and Hatnua leader Justice Minister Tzipi Livni.


Livni and Lapid opposed Israel's National Bill and provided Netanyahu a golden opportunity to reinstate his status as a devoted Jewish patriotic and a nationalist voice. I guess that Netanyahu will survive this political round.


But here is a small yet significant piece of the story. Seven month ago it was Netanyahu who mounted pressure on the PA, the Hamas and the Palestinian population in an effort to break up the Palestinian unity government. After six month of violence, a war in Gaza and a 3rd Intifada in the making, the Palestinians seem more united than ever, and Netanyahu's Government is breaking apart.